In a black eye for Ukraine’s investment image, a pioneer Canadian renewables investor is accusing Igor Kolomoisky and his business partners of trying steal a 10.5 MW solar plant.

Monday, November 23, 2020
In a black eye for Ukraine’s investment image, a pioneer Canadian renewables investor is accusing Igor Kolomoisky and his business partners of trying steal a 10.5 MW solar plant.

In a black eye for Ukraine’s investment image, a pioneer Canadian renewables investor is accusing Igor Kolomoisky and his business partners of trying steal a 10.5 MW solar plant. Built by Calgary’s TIU Canada, the plant was inaugurated in January 2018 and hailed as the first investment under the new Canada Ukraine Free Trade Agreement. Built largely to feed Kolomoisky’s Nikopol Ferroalloy Plant, the solar plant’s substation is on the Ferroalloy plant grounds. The Ferroalloy plant controls road access to the solar plant.

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