Odesa hosts 33 healthcare facilities providing urgent and planned medical care to the local population, military personnel, and internally displaced persons.
Given the challenges posed by the war, a primary goal is ensuring the energy autonomy of medical institutions.
All healthcare facilities are equipped with diesel and gasoline generators of varying capacities to handle potential power outages. Currently, there are 152 generators in medical establishments, including 63 high-capacity units. In the absence of centralized electricity supply, the larger generators in the city’s round-the-clock hospitals activate automatically, allowing medical equipment to function.
Seven healthcare institutions are fitted with solar power stations equipped with energy storage devices.
The facilities have 14 gas, diesel, and solid fuel boilers, ensuring independent heating. Additionally, some hospitals are undergoing preparations to install modular boilers that run on alternative fuels as part of a memorandum with the WHO in Ukraine.
With financial support from UNICEF, four city hospitals have been equipped with artesian wells and drinking water stations, ensuring independent water supply. Medical establishments are stocked with technical and drinking water supplies.


