EU chief Ursula von der Leyen on Friday announced plans for Brussels to lend Ukraine €35 billion ($39.1 billion) backed by revenues of frozen Russian assets and promised to help Ukraine “keep warm” ahead of a third winter of war with Russia.

Von der Leyen was in Kyiv after a summer of intense fighting and as fears grow for how Ukraine’s war-battered energy grid will cope this winter.

The International Energy Agency has said Kyiv faces its “sternest test” so far this winter, with Moscow expected to launch another bombing campaign on the country’s already damaged infrastructure.

Von der Leyen’s trip also came ahead of Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky trip to the United States to present plans to end two and a half years of war.

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“The European Union is here to help you in this challenge to keep the lights on, to keep your people warm and keep your economy going as you fight for your survival,” von der Leyen said.

“We are now confident that we can deliver this loan to Ukraine very quickly, a loan that is backed by the windfall profits from immobilised Russian assets,” she added, speaking alongside Zelensky. ‘Dangerous situation’

Ukraine is desperate for funds as it seeks to prop up its economy and keep its electricity grid functioning.

The EU’s proposal -- which needs to be signed off by member states -- is part of a bigger plan agreed by G7 powers in June to use the proceeds of frozen Russian assets to lend Kyiv $50 billion.

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Ex-Soviet Ukraine and Moldova opened European Union accession negotiations in June, setting them on a long -- and yet uncertain -- path towards membership that Russia has tried to block.

The EU has frozen roughly $235 billion of Russian central bank funds since the Kremlin launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the vast bulk of immobilised Russian assets worldwide.

Von der Leyen also said Brussels would help “repair the damages done by the Russian strikes” to Ukrainian energy infrastructure. 

“We will aim to restore 2.5 gigawatt of capacity this winter, that is approximately 15 percent of your country’s needs for this winter,” she said.

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Zelensky praised the measures in his evening address

“In everything from defence to social issues, we have really good results. Ursula, thank you,” he said.

Norway later announced it would increase civilian aid to Ukraine by $475 million and extend its aid package by three years to 2030. 

“We are living through a very dangerous situation in Europe,” said Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store. 

Zelensky’s ‘victory plan’

Zelensky is expected to present his so-called “victory plan” to end the fighting to US President Joe Biden during next week’s visit. 

“I really hope that he will support this plan,” Zelensky said.

“The plan is designed for decisions that will have to happen from October to December... We would like that very much. Then we believe that the plan will work,” he added.

He is due to meet Biden and the Democrats’ presidential candidate Kamala Harris. Kyiv says he will also meet her Republican election rival Donald Trump.

Zelensky has said he aims to host another international peace summit outlining his vision to end the war in November, to which Russia will be invited.

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His proposals will come after Ukraine’s surprise incursion into Russia in August, where they still hold vast swathes of territory -- and as Moscow’s forces advance towards the city of Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine.

In Pokrovsk, a city once home to 60,000 people, AFP saw deserted streets, with most shops and windows barricaded. 

Russian forces are now only 10 kilometres (six miles) away from the city, which Moscow has been trying to capture for weeks.

Pokrovsk evacuations

Ukraine has been rushing evacuations this summer but around 16,000 people are still left in the city.

Some of them are reluctantly deciding to heed the advice of authorities and evacuate.

“I don’t even have the words to explain how difficult it is,” Alyona Kozynets told AFP just before she boarded an evacuation bus with her three children. 

“We’ve worked many years to build all this and now we have to leave,” she said. 

Tears ran down her face as she embraced her husband Yuri, who was staying behind to work at the Pokrovsk mine.

“She and the children are all my life. My soul, my heart. And it’s simply impossible for anyone to live without their soul and their heart,” he said as the bus departed.

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Ukrainian shelling and drone attacks on Russian-occupied areas of Donetsk region killed three people, wounding more than a dozen others Friday, said the region’s Russian-installed chief Denis Pushilin.

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