Interfax-Ukraine
18:53 25.02.2026

RSE delivers 2,500 kVA mobile power plant to Ukraine

2 min read
RSE delivers 2,500 kVA mobile power plant to Ukraine
Photo: RSE

The Czech company RSE s.r.o. has delivered a 2,500 kVA mobile diesel power plant to Ukraine for the operational supply of large critical infrastructure facilities or residential buildings, the company reported.

RSE Group Ukraine said Wednesday on Facebook that this is not just a generator but a full industrial-level energy module, including a FG Wilson diesel unit, control and protection systems, integrated engineering solutions and the ability to operate through a step-up transformer for connection to medium-voltage networks.

The company emphasized that the installation is mounted on a vehicle platform, allowing rapid deployment of capacity in regions with generation deficits or damaged infrastructure.

"Such solutions can provide electricity to large facilities, medical institutions, water and heat supply systems, industry or residential areas in crisis conditions," RSE said.

It specified that this is a mobile infrastructure solution that can operate in backup mode and as an autonomous power source with the possibility of integration into an existing energy system of a facility or region.

The company performed engineering integration, design of the soundproof container and final assembly at its production facility in the Czech Republic, ensuring full quality control and readiness for operation from day one.

At the same time, it also noted that in current realities, energy resilience is formed not only through large centralized stations but also through flexible mobile capacity capable of rapid integration into the system and maintaining its stability.

"RSE implements engineering solutions that strengthen the architecture of national energy security where the guaranteed ability to operate under unstable conditions is critically important," the company said.

As reported, citing Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko, on January 29 Ukraine received the first shipment of energy equipment from the German government as part of a winter emergency support package increased to EUR 120 million. The equipment included cogeneration units from RSE, which specializes in implementing energy projects based on such units.

Later, the Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute and RSE announced they are introducing a cogeneration course integrated into the educational program for training energy engineers.

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