European Environment Agency says new status will help Kyiv improve monitoring, data and environmental protection as Russia’s invasion damages land, water, air quality and protected areas
Ukraine has joined Europe’s main environmental monitoring network in a major step for conservation, as the war continues to ravage land, water systems, air quality and protected areas.
The European Environment Agency (EEA) and its European Environment Information and Observation Network, known as Eionet, formally welcomed Ukraine as a co-operating country on Thursday, extending the network to 32 member countries and eight cooperating countries.
The move gives Ukraine a formal place inside Europe’s main environmental data system as the country works to record, monitor and eventually restore areas damaged by Russia’s invasion.
Ukraine’s accession also brings into the network a country whose environmental recovery is now closely tied to wider European monitoring and conservation planning, with data on land, water systems, pollution and protected areas feeding more directly into continent-wide assessments.
The EEA said the destruction of livelihoods and of the natural environment were “inseparable consequences of the conflict”, with damage to land, water systems, air quality and protected areas now treated as a shared European concern.
The agency also said the impacts did not stop at national borders.
Oleksii Sobolev, Ukraine’s Minister of Economy, Environment and Agriculture, said: “Today is an important day for Ukraine. We are pleased to join the European Environment Agency and the Eionet network as a coperating country and become part of the European environmental community.
“This comes at a particularly important moment, as Ukraine moves forward in its EU accession negotiations and confidently continues on its path toward European integration.”
He said Ukraine was continuing environmental reforms and strengthening its institutions despite “the enormous challenges caused by ongoing Russian aggression”.
“Cooperation with the EEA will help us improve our environmental monitoring and information systems, implement EU environmental legislation, and deepen Ukraine’s integration into the European space,” he added.
Ukraine becomes the eighth EEA cooperating country, joining Moldova and the Western Balkan partners Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo.
The decision was endorsed by the EEA Management Board and is supported by dedicated European Commission funding.
The cooperation is grounded in the EU–Ukraine Association Agreement and the EU enlargement framework. Ukraine applied for EU membership in February 2022 and was recognised as a candidate country in June that year.
The EEA said the new arrangement would help Ukraine build the institutional and technical foundations for future Eionet integration.
It will also provide a roadmap for environmental data reporting in line with EU environmental law and support Ukraine’s gradual participation in EEA systems, networks and knowledge platforms.
Jessika Roswall, European Commissioner for Environment, Water Resilience and a Competitive Circular Economy, said Ukraine’s path towards European integration was “one of the most powerful demonstrations of European values we have seen in recent years”.
She said: “Welcoming Ukraine into the EEA/Eionet family is a recognition of that commitment and a practical investment in the environmental resilience of the whole continent.”
Roswall said Ukraine faced a large volume of work after the formal opening of accession negotiations, with the country’s resources already strained by war.
“A country that continues to advance its alignment with EU environmental standards while enduring the devastation of war deserves our full support,” she added.
Leena Ylä-Mononen, the EEA’s executive director, said Ukraine’s participation would build on earlier project-based cooperation between 2010 and 2020, as well as its role as a contracting party to the Energy Community since 2011.
She said: “The environmental damage caused by the war is a concern for all of us, and joint work on monitoring, data and assessment will be an important part of what this cooperation delivers.”
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Main image: Burned-out tanks lie in a scarred woodland landscape behind Ukrainian and EU flags, illustrating the environmental damage caused by Russia’s invasion as Ukraine joins Europe’s main environmental network. Picture: The European. Photo: Igor Francyshyn via Pexels.
