- Category
- War in Ukraine
Ukraine Signs 160 Agreements Worth Over €10 Billion at Recovery Conference in Poland

Ukraine has signed 160 agreements totaling more than €10 billion (around $11 billion) following the Ukraine Recovery Conference held in Gdańsk this year, Ukrainian officials said.
The results of the conference were announced by Ukraine’s Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko on June 25, who confirmed the conclusion of the event and outlined its key outcomes.
We bring you stories from the ground. Your support keeps our team in the field.
“160 agreements signed this year worth over €10 billion are the result of the daily work of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the entire Ukrainian team,” Svyrydenko wrote.
She added that the main outcomes of the conference included a broad package of financial and reconstruction initiatives.
Among them are a €3.2 billion (about $3.4 billion) first tranche under a new European Union financial instrument, a $3.4 billion agreement with the World Bank, and the launch of the European flagship fund for Ukraine’s reconstruction.

Other results include the establishment of the Ukraine Transport Support Fund, €140 million (nearly $160 million) allocated for housing programmes, and an agreement with the European Investment Bank on rebuilding and protecting roads in frontline regions.
Svyrydenko said the conference underscored Ukraine’s long-term integration with Europe.
“This day once again confirmed that Ukraine and Europe share a common path, common values, and a common future,” she said.

Just a day earlier, the European Commission signed agreements worth more than €1.1 billion ($1.25 billion) under the Ukraine Investment Framework and officially launched the European Flagship Fund for Ukraine’s reconstruction during the fifth Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk, Poland.
The initiative—implemented in cooperation with the European Investment Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development—aims to channel critical financial support toward municipal rebuilding, stabilisation of the energy sector, and financing for businesses, particularly in frontline regions.
The funding package is part of a wider international support effort, which also includes a separate $3.39 billion agreement between the Ukrainian government and the World Bank.

That arrangement comprises a $1.04 billion development policy loan, backed by $500 million from the United Kingdom and $540 million from Japan, as well as $2.35 billion in grant financing from the F.O.R.T.I.S. Ukraine FIF fund.
Additionally, during the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged the immediate launch of negotiations aimed at ending the war, saying the moment had come to freeze the front line and stop the bloodshed.
Addressing participants at the event, he said Russia would not prevail in the war, while reaffirming that Germany’s support for Kyiv remains firm as Ukraine continues to defend its territory more than four years into Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Discuss this article:
-4a56a6b482ec132402c16ef6fcabf9a2.png)


-72b63a4e0c8c475ad81fe3eed3f63729.jpeg)



