Wednesday, January 21, 2026

 January 21st, 2026 Next Summary on January 23rd


Politics - Kyiv struggles with power grid

- 600,000 have left the city

- Talks in Davos, tomorrow in Moscow


Combat ops - Few changes in the lines 


Weather


The very cold weather continues.


Kharkiv

16 and cloudy. Cloudy for the next week. Very cold, high temperatures in the teens through Sunday. Wind chills near zero. Snow beginning on Sunday, warming to the upper 20s on Sunday, snow and rain-snow-ice mix continues Monday through Wednesday. Winds easterly, 5-10kts.


Melitopol

18 and partly cloudy. Cloudy all week, snow on Friday, snow-ice Monday and Tuesday. Daily highs in the mid to upper 20s, daily lows on the low 20s. Wind chills in the teens. Winds easterly, 10-15kts.


Kyiv

7 and partly cloudy. Cloudy tomorrow, and through all next week, snow Sunday, rain-ice-snow mix Monday and Tuesday. Very cold through Sunday, daily highs in the low teens, warming on Monday to low 30s, but back to the low 20s on Wednesday. Wind chills around zero this week, low 20s Monday and Tuesday, low teens next week. Winds easterly, 10-15kts.


Politics


The power grid remains the number 1 issue.

Kyiv’s Mayor Klitschko told reporters that approximately 600,000 citizens have left Kyiv in the last week or two after he urged them to relocate during this crisis. 

Kyiv had a population of 2.9 million at the beginning of 2022, it fell to just one million within a month of the start of the war, and then ballooned to almost 4 million by early 2025, as displaced people from other parts of Ukraine moved to the capital.

As of this morning more than 4,000 apartment buildings in Kyiv are without hearting, and 60% of the city has no electricity. But the problem is not confined to Kyiv; at least 1,500 houses in Zaporizhzhia are currently without electricity. And several other oblasts also were without power as of this morning. Many buildings have become so cold all the water has frozen, to include toilets. Many facilities drained their water to prevent pipes from bursting, those that have done so will take time to come back on line. Those that did not drain their pipes will have burst pipes and all the associated issues.


US and Russian negotiators met today in Davos; the meeting was described as “very positive” and “constructive.”


President Zelenskyy is urging Europe to create a joint defence force of 3million to counter the Russian threat.


Ambassador Witkoff and Mr. Kushner will go to Moscow tomorrow to meet with President Putin.

“The Russians have invited us to come and that’s a significant statement from them.”


Ground Operations


SUMY AND KHARKIV OBLASTS


Fighting continued north of Sumy city and at selected spots along the border but there were no confirmed changes to the front lines.

North of Kharkiv city imagery confirmed Russian gains in eastern Vovchansk, confirming earlier estimates that Russian forces had gained control of central Vovchansk and now control most of the city.


NORTH OF THE DONETS RIVER


Fighting was reported at multiple sites from Kupaynsk south to the Donets River, but there were no confirmed changes in the front lines.


BAKHMUT - TORETSK - POKROVSK


Fighting was reported northeast and east of Slovyansk, as well as in the area east of Kostiantinivka, but there were no changes noted in the front lines in this area.

Further west, fighting was reported in the Dobropillia area but there were no changes to the front lines in the area just north of the Pokrovsk pocket.

Fighting continues in Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad and Ukrainian forces report “constant infiltration efforts” by Russian forces as recon probes try to locate and isolate pockets of Ukrainian forces. But there were no confirmed changes to the front lines inside Pokrovsk or Myrnohrad, and there are still multiple pockets of Ukrainian troops dug in and holding in both cities.

Immediately west of Pokrovsk, imagery confirmed Russian gains, as Russian forces have pushed up the O525 roadway (formerly Lenin street) and have reached the middle of the reservoir that forms the major geographic feature of the town.

South and south-west of Pokrovsk fighting was reported in and just south-east of Novopavlivka, but here were no changes to the front lines. 


SOUTHERN UKRAINE


Fighting continues along the line south of the Vovcha River but there were no confirmed changes to the front line.

Fighting continues around Hulyaipole, with troops in contact in the very center of that city, and north-west, basically along the line of the Haichur River, but there were no confirmed changes to the front line. Russian forces now control the east end of Hulyaipole, all but a few blocks east the T0401 roadway, and have pushed at least 4 or 5 blocks south-west from the river for the entire length of the city.

There were reports of fighting west and north-west of Orikhiv, in the vicinity of a cluster of small towns around Novoboikivske; this cluster of villages is about 5 miles north of Mali Shcherbaky and the T0812 roadway. While there is no confirmed Russian control of these towns, the Ukrainian forces are reporting the fighting - so the Russians have pushed that far north, at least for now; this places Russian forces about 5 miles north-east of Stepnohirsk and 7 miles east of Prymorske, and about 15 miles from Zaporizhzhia city.

Fighting was again reported near the ruined Antonovsky bridge, upriver from Kherson, bit there were no specifics.


Air and Maritime Operations 


Russia’s advanced drone unit - the Rubikon Center for Advanced Unmanned Technologies (referred to as simply Rubikon) released a video yesterday showing an FPV drone strike on a HIMARS as well as on a Patriot launcher and an MPQ-53 (the Patriot radar), though there is some speculation that the Patriot elements were decoys. Of note, the strike was enabled through the use of an FPV drone controlled via use of a mother-ship drone and a Starlink communications path.


During the night of January 20th-January 21st, Russian forces launched at least 1 x Kh-22 cruise missile, and 97 x strike drones into Ukrainian air space. The UAF claimed it shot down, or defeated with EW, 84 drones. 

Damage was reported in Donetsk, Mykolaiv, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts.  Energy infrastructure was again the primary target.

Civilian casualties include at least 5 dead and 3 wounded. 

RuAF tacair struck targets in 12 towns.


Last night or early this morning one or more strike drones reportedly struck a substation that provides power to the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, but power was restored within several hours.

The substations are necessary to connect auxiliary power to the facility to operate safely and monitoring equipment.


During the night of January 19th-January 20th, Russian forces launched at least 1 x Zircon hypersonic missile, 18 x Iskander ballistic missiles, 15 x Kh-101 cruise missiles, and 339 x strike drones into Ukrainian air space. The UAF claimed it shot down, or defeated with EW, 14 ballistic missiles, 13 cruise missiles, and 315 drones. 

Damage was reported in Chernihiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Kyiv, Mykolaiv, Odessa, Poltava, Sumy, Vinnytsia, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts.  Energy infrastructure was again the primary target; 287 buildings remain without power in Kyiv. These strikes knocked out power to 173,000 households in metropolitan Kyiv. Power outages were also reported in Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Odessa, Rivne and Sumy oblasts.

No civilian casualty report had been released as I wrote this. 

RuAF tacair struck targets in 10 towns.


Economic Reporting


Feb22   Sep9 Oct8 Nov7 Dec8 Jan8 Jan20 Jan21

Brent      94.71    67.03 66.18 63.86 62.94 61.26 64.96 64.94

WTI     92.10    63.26 62.48 59.94 59.26 57.10 60.37 60.41

NG       3.97        3.12 3.44 4.33 4.96 3.41 3.85 4.62

Wheat     8.52  5.22 5.06 5.32 5.38 5.22 5.10 5.09

Ruble     85          84.03 81.28 80.95 76.52 80.35 77.73 76.70

Hryvnia 28.6 41.23 41.48 41.89 42.15 43.10 43.28 43.03

Urals 91.66 60.12 61.15 56.56 54.92 50.40 55.73 56.85

ESPO 94.52 68.32 66.74 65.18 61.95 52.28 56.22 57.19

Sokol 99.31 62.97 61.91 60.71 60.62 55.57 59.35 59.62


The jump in natural gas prices is a direct result of the cold weather and the forecasts for sustained cold temperatures for the next week or so across much of the northern hemisphere.


Thoughts

It is difficult to assess the damage, and resilience, of the Ukrainian power grid, and new gear is moving into the country on a daily basis, and the harsh weather is certainly contributing to the problem. But several issues stand out:

The power grid itself is based on an old Soviet model, which facilitates Russian targeting, they understand the key nodes and the weak points - though much has been changed, particularly in the last 4 years. That said, no modern power grid is designed for any sort of graceful degradation in the shadow of continual drone and missile strikes.

Russian forces have targeted some items that are hard to replace; most power grids stockpile only a small number of the larger transformers - they simply last too long to sink money into them. Under normal circumstances no one would expect to lose more than a handful of transformers at a time. Accordingly, if many are destroyed, the system needs to “contract” and wait for the replacement.

Ukraine has many older apartment buildings complexes that have centralized heating as well as water and power, so a loss of electricity also means no water or heat in those buildings.

This has now been going on for a while. Virtually every piece of the Ukrainian power grid has sustained some level of damage. How much more each piece can sustain before it fails is probably not centrally known. My guess is that Ukrenergo - the state power “company,” would have a hard time keeping an accurate picture for the entire country. But the numbers stand, as reported just last week: the power generation need is a minimum of 18 gigawatts, there is currently an 11 gigawatt capability. 

Finally, other services in the city - the subway, for example, are being cut back as part of the effort to use less electricity, further complicating any effort to move about the city. 

Pray for global warming.


v/r pete 




Tuesday, January 20, 2026

 January 20th, 2026


Politics - Power outages continue

- Some small progress in talks in Florida


Combat Ops - Marginal Russian gains

- More drone and missile strikes  


Weather


The very cold weather continues.


Kharkiv

18 and partly cloudy. Partly to mostly cloudy for the next week. Very cold, high temperatures in the teens through Sunday. Wind chills near zero. Winds variable, 5-10kts.


Melitopol

16 and partly cloudy. Cold and clear tomorrow mooring, but warming into the upper 20s. Snow on Thursday, rain showers daily, Monday through Thursday next week. Temperatures will be in the 20s through Sunday, then warming into the 30s next week. Winds variable, 5-10kts.


Kyiv

10 and partly cloudy. Partly cloudy tomorrow, then clouding up on Thursday, snow on the weekend. Very cold weather continues through Saturday, daily highs in the teens. Sunday will see some warming into the upper 20s, then colder again nest week. Wind chills around zero this week, single digits next week. Winds westerly through tomorrow, 5-10kts, then easterly, 10-15kts.


Politics


Emergency restrictions on electricity usage remain in effect in much of Ukraine.

A Ukrenergo spokesman (Ukrenergo is the state run electricity “company”)  commented:

"Power engineers from Ukrenergo and other companies are doing everything possible to restore supply to all consumers or at least significantly reduce outage times in each oblast of Ukraine. But for this, the power system needs help."

“This is because the aggressor [Russia] carried out a combined strike that damaged both generation facilities and the electricity transmission and distribution networks.”

Kyiv city, Kyiv Oblast, and Donetsk, Kharkiv, Poltava and Sumy oblasts are currently have the greatest number of unscheduled power outages. But, as of this morning  Dnipropetrovsk, Odessa and Rivne are also without power following last night’s strikes; Odessa reported 30,800 houses without power.


In eastern Kyiv (on the east bank of the Dnepr River) 3,500 buildings were without water or electricity this morning, and 5,600 residential buildings in western Kyiv were also without heating this morning. Vice PM for Reconstruction / Minister of Energy Kuleba said that they expected to restore power and heat and water by the end of today.

"The situation remains difficult, we are working on specific and systemic solutions… The strategic task is a plan for the development of the city's distributed generation. We must reach additional capacities of over 100 MW. This will make the capital more resistant to attacks.”


Lead Ukrainian negotiator Umerov commented that Ukrainian and Russia representatives met in Florida this past weekend, discussed security guarantees “in detail,” with “a focus on practical mechanisms for their implementation.”

Talks will reportedly continue in Davos, Switzerland.


Czech President Pavel on Friday reiterated a promise made in 2024 that the Czech Republic would provide L-159 aircraft (designed as a basic jet trainer, also used for light attack) to Ukraine for use in shooting down drones.

On Monday Czech PM Babis corrected that, and said the republic will not  provide aircraft to Ukraine.


Ground Operations


SUMY AND KHARKIV OBLASTS


Fighting continues north of Sumy city but there were no substantive changes to the front lines in the last several days. Imagery did confirm small Russian gains south-east of Sumy city in the village of Vysoke (population of 28 before the war), about 3 miles north of Hrabivske (population of, perhaps, 700 prior to the war) which the Russian forces occupied a few days before Christmas. The town offers no tactical or operational value, so presumably is an irritant, trying to push Ukrainian forces to shift and weaken other areas of the line.

Fighting continues north and north-east of Kharkiv, with reports of repeated Russian recon probes, as well as east of Kharkiv, along the border just north of the Oskil River, but there were no confirmed changes in these areas.

However, imagery did for the first time show Russian forces had seized the small “peninsula” of land called Dehtyarne, a farm and village of perhaps 4 families, north-east of Kharkiv about 60 miles, that connects to the rest of Ukraine through a single, 2 lane road. Russia has repeatedly claimed that it has taken this piece of terrain over the past half year, this is first imagery that shows actual Russian occupation.


NORTH OF THE DONETS RIVER


Fighting continues in and around Kupyansk, and in the large pocket east of Kupyansk, but there have been no substantive changes in the front lines. The pocket, all east of the Oskil River, is about 12 miles north to south, and 9 miles east to west, the west edge formed by the Oskil River. What is of note is that President Putin referenced that there were 15 Ukrainian battalions in the pocket (he suggested they are trapped, they are not). But, assuming his statement as to numbers is roughly accurate, there are 6 Russian brigades along the perimeter of the pocket, which would be consistent with 15 battalions (roughly 5 brigades) defending. 

Further south, imagery confirmed Russian gains west and south-west of Zarichne about 3 miles, pushing on the eastern edge of Lyman, and now control all the terrain east of a line running due north out of Lyman, and the terrain east and south-east of Lyman, to Siversk. This places firmly controlled Russian terrain within 12 miles of Slovyansk. The northern-most city on the fortress belt.


BAKHMUT - TORETSK - POKROVSK


Imagery confirmed that Russian forces control the towns of Stupochky and Predtechyne, south-west of Chasiv Yar, have advanced north-west of Predtechyne, and continue recon probes and infiltration into Kostiantinivka. At the same time imagery confirmed Ukrainian gains in Ivanopillia, south-east of Kostiantinivka, about 5 miles north-west of Toretsk.

Further west, fighting continues along the front line north of the Pokrovsk - Myrnohrad battlefield, but there were no confirmed changes.

In the Pokrovsk - Myrnohrad area, the southern border of the Myrnhrad pocket now appears to be the H-32 roadway, the west edge of the pocket perhaps 2,000 feet east of the village of Svitle, and the east edge a bit more than a mile away, just on the east side of the remains of the large coal mine; the north edge of the pocket is a little more than a mile away; the north-west remains open as an avenue for resupply or withdrawal, but is under direct fire and drone strike from Russian forces.

Ukrainian forces continue to control the north-west end of Pokrovsk and probe into the city. Gen Syrskyi maintains that Ukrainian forces will retake Pokrovsk.  

Further to the southwest, between Pokrovsk and the Vovcha River there were no changes to the front lines.


SOUTHERN UKRAINE


Fighting continues along there front lines south of the Vovcha River, in and around Hulyaipole and west, to include reports of fighting near the Antonvosky bridge, just up river from Kherson. But there were no confirmed charges in the front lines in any of these areas.

Ukraine’s Southern Command reports increased Russian activity on the southern eastern and north-western approaches to Hulyaipole, and Russian probes continue into the center and west side of the city.

One Russian source reports that Russian forces are having trouble consolidating positions in the towns west of Orkihiv because there are literally no buildings or walls left standing and therefore nothing to uses as a starting point for defensive positions. Given some pictures I have seen of some of these towns, this sounds sadly, bizarrely credible.


Air and Maritime Operations 


During the night of January 19th-January 20th, Russian forces launched at least 1 x Zircon hypersonic missile, 18 x Iskander ballistic missiles, 15 x Kh-101 cruise missiles, and 339 x strike drones into Ukrainian air space. The UAF claimed it shot down, or defeated with EW, 14 ballistic missiles, 13 cruise missiles, and 315 drones. 

Damage was reported in Chernihiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Kyiv, Mykolaiv, Odessa, Poltava, Sumy, Vinnytsia, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts.  Energy infrastructure was again the primary target; 287 buildings remain without power in Kyiv.

Ni civilian casualty report had been released as I wrote this. 

RuAF tacair struck targets in 10 towns.


During the period from January 16th through January 19th Russian forces launched at least 461 x strike drones into Ukrainian air space. The UAF claimed it shot down, or defeated with EW, 252 drones. 

Damage was reported in cities scattered across most of eastern and central Ukraine.

Civilian casualties included at least 1 killed and 4 wounded.


Ukrainian military intelligence (GUR) is reporting that Russia is considering strikes on certain substations that support Ukraine’s nuclear power stations, as part of the campaign to reduce electricity supply (and heat and water in many cases) to Ukrainian cities.

As a reminder, Ukrainian civilian (domestic) power requirement is 18 GW; current generation capacity is 11 GW. Striking one or more of these substations would further reduce the available supply.


Ukrainian forces claim to have struck the Saratov oil refinery (on the Volga River, about 400 miles south-east of Moscow) during the night of January 18th-19th

Ukrainian drones also struck the power grid in Luhansk Oblast, causing a short power outage.


Ukrainian forces released a video showing a Ukrainian “Sting” drone, designed to intercept Russian dozens, hitting and bringing down a jet-powered Shahed drone, a demonstration of the continual and rapid development cycles on both sides 


Economic Reporting


Feb22   Sep9 Oct8 Nov7 Dec8 Jan8 Jan16 Jan20

Brent      94.71    67.03 66.18 63.86 62.94 61.26 64.29 64.96

WTI     92.10    63.26 62.48 59.94 59.26 57.10 59.67 60.37

NG       3.97         3.12 3.44 4.33 4.96 3.41 3.08 3.85

Wheat     8.52         5.22 5.06 5.32 5.38 5.22 5.19 5.10

Ruble     85          84.03 81.28 80.95 76.52 80.35 78.15 77.73

Hryvnia 28.6 41.23 41.48 41.89 42.15 43.10 43.34 43.28

Urals 91.66 60.12 61.15 56.56 54.92 50.40 54.57 55.73

ESPO 94.52 68.32 66.74 65.18 61.95 52.28 56.08 56.22

Sokol 99.31 62.97 61.91 60.71 60.62 55.57 58.99 59.35


Thoughts

There is a great deal of goofy reporting going on, as the propaganda machines seem to have cycled into high gear.

Ukrainian propaganda reports that the Russian economy teeters on the brink, that Russia’s army is crumbling and will fall apart before the end of the year and that Putin will have no option but to mobilize and that point his people will rise up and throw him out. Meanwhile, Russian casualties, so the story goes, continue to mount at what can only be called a phenomenal rate and the Ukrainian Army, having learned from the last 4 years, and especially from the 2023 counter-offensive, will go on the attack this year and will “devastate” the Russian army.

Meanwhile, the Russian propaganda machine, also in full gear, cranks out story after story about Russian forces in this or that village, this or that town, this or that city, when, in fact, there are no more than a handful of Russian soldiers anywhere near that village or town or city. And several key Russian figures (Medvedev, Lavrov, and Putin) continue to make all sorts of promises and threats that simply don't match any actions.

It is as if nothing that is said by any capital anywhere (to include not just Kyiv or Moscow, but London, Paris and Berlin) has any real contact with reality and should just be ignored, at least in regard to how the war on the ground is being fought.

Meanwhile there is this, the tale of numbers told by one sad, harsh element of the war in which both sides are actually doing what they promised: the exchange of the dead.

On December 19th Russia and Ukraine exchanged bodies of dead soldiers; Ukraine turned over the bodies of 30 dead Russian soldiers; Russia turned over the bodes of 1,000 Ukrainian soldiers. That brought the total for calendar year 2025 to 16,070 dead Ukrainian soldiers turned over to Ukraine and 191 dead Russian soldiers turned over to Russia (assuming my math is correct). You read that correctly: less than 200 versus more than 16,000.

This is a strange and gory facet of this war, the exchange of bodies, but it serves, if nothing else, to point out that whatever the correct count is on casualties (which I assume we will never see), the public counts are mostly wrong, and probably vastly so. 

That a great many have been killed is a given. But it begs credulity that an army could have been so badly manhandled as the Russian army by the Ukrainian army, as most reporting claims, that they suffered more than a quarter million KIAs in 2025 (some accounts place the number at 400,000 or more), while Ukraine suffered fewer than 20,000 killed, and yet Ukrainian forces recovered fewer than 200 Russian bodies, and Russian forces recovered something like 75% of all Ukrainian KIAs??? Yet, Russian ground gains have been very slow, and a very high percentage of casualties are, by all accounts, caused by artillery and drone strikes on troops in or immediately in front of their own lines. 

Something really doesn’t match. But the numbers are real: 16,070 Ukrainian dead returned compared to 191 Russian returned.


Meanwhile, as the poor citizens of Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities freeze in the dark, Ukrainian forces responded by striking other power grids. Beginning in December they have conducted strikes into Kursk and Belgorod oblasts, knocking out the power to some 60,000 houses in Belgorod last week, at least for a few hours.

While this may not provide any real strategic benefit to Ukrainian war aims, there is a public morale component that makes sense - people do want revenge.

But over the past several week power grid targets were struck in occupied Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts and over the weekend in occupied Zaporizhia oblast, the latest knocking out power to more than 200,000 people in Mariupol for the better part of a day. And while the strikes on Belgorod has merit, in some sense (revenge has some “appeal" in war), Kyiv insists those people are all Ukrainians; so they are now attacking their own people?


v/r pete