The role of local communities in the restoration of agricultural infrastructure after destruction

Alona Kliuchnyk, Nataliia Shyshpanova, Liudmyla Prohoniuk, Nataliia Galunets, Anzhela Husenko
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Abstract

The research aimed to evaluate the efficacy of financial, organisational, and managerial strategies for the rehabilitation of agricultural infrastructure in Ukraine from 2022 to 2024. The analysis examined the socio-economic prerequisites for the agricultural sector's development before the onset of conflicts, along with their effects on the devastation of production facilities, land resources, and the logistics infrastructure. The study determined that the hostilities destroyed 4,800 agricultural  infrastructure facilities, damaged 3.2  million hectares of land, destroyed 12,500  km of roads, and reduced employment in the agricultural sector by 15%. By the end of 2024, the company managed to restore 2,750 facilities (57%), return 1.8 million hectares of land to cultivation and repair 7,300 km of roads. The financing gap in 2022 was more than USD 3.8 billion, rendering it impossible to modernise production facilities in a timely manner. Private investment, which dropped to USD 600 million in 2022, began to grow only in 2023-2024, reaching 950 million USD. In the same period, crowdfunding totalled more than USD 33 million, of which the largest share was used to modernise irrigation systems (USD 9.1 million in 2024). At the same time, the cooperative sector rehabilitated 65 farms in 2024, providing more than USD 21 million in economic contribution. Volunteer initiatives have also shown growth, supporting small farmers and the restoration of critical infrastructure. Demographic shifts from rural regions, particularly the exodus of approximately 120,000 individuals in 2022, have substantially diminished the agricultural sector’s workforce capacity. The findings demonstrated that comprehensive reconstruction of agricultural infrastructure necessitates the acquisition of supplementary financial capital, optimal utilisation of public-private partnership frameworks, and implementation of initiatives to facilitate workforce repatriation. This investigation provides a foundational structure for enhancing investment strategies within the agricultural domain and optimising collaborative efforts among local communities, governmental entities, and international funding organisations

Keywords

agriculture; investment projects; financial support; cooperative initiatives; international assistance; recovery processes; communities

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