The Ukrainian national electricity company Ukrenergo said power cuts "were not applied" in Kyiv, the Kyiv region and the entire central region of the country despite ongoing Russian attacks on electricity infrastructure.
The company does not plan to introduce any further emergency shutdowns on Thursday, according to Volodymyr Kudrytskyi, CEO of Ukrenergo, in a statement.
It comes after strikes across the country targeting energy infrastructure resulted in rolling power outages across Ukraine earlier in the week.
"Yesterday evening, dispatching constraints were not applied in Kyiv, in the Kyiv region and the entire central region, restrictions were lifted in the Northeastern regions of our country since 7:55 p.m.," said Kudrytskyi Thursday.
Ukrenergo and regional utilities have managed to stabilize the energy supply and residents in central Ukraine reduced consumption, he said.
"Whether there will be restrictions in the future depends primarily on whether there will be no new shelling and destruction," he said.
The head of the press office of the Ukrainian energy ministry Larysa Shustenko told CNN that they cannot anticipate when the grid and infrastructure will be fully restored because "attacks continue and some places were hit twice already."