{"text":[[{"start":11.94,"text":"A series of massive Russian air strikes in the past week has disabled nearly 60 per cent of Ukraine’s gas production, raising fears of winter shortages, according to two Ukrainian officials with knowledge of the damage."}],[{"start":28.03,"text":"The attacks prompted Ukrainian officials this week to call meetings with western partners to inform them of the situation, the officials told the Financial Times."}],[{"start":39.47,"text":"Sergii Koretskyi, chief executive of Naftogaz, Ukraine’s state energy company, said in an interview that Russia was again seeking to sap morale with targeted strikes on energy infrastructure, as it has every year since 2022. The difference this time, Koretskyi said, was in the frequency and scale of the attacks — with hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles on an almost nightly basis."}],[{"start":69.41,"text":"The Kremlin’s goal is “to break our spirit”, he said. “This has nothing to do with military needs, none of these assets have any military value at all.”"}],[{"start":80.53999999999999,"text":"As a consequence of these attacks, “we need billions of cubic metres of gas more during the heating season”, he added."}],[{"start":89.32,"text":"Ukraine needed 13.2bn cubic metres of gas for the winter before the October attacks, and Kyiv had planned to import 4.6 bcm of gas by November 1 — “significantly more than in previous years”, Koretskyi said. "}],[{"start":109.46,"text":"He declined to provide a specific number but the two Ukrainian officials predicted that at the current pace of Russia’s attacks, Ukraine would probably need to buy about 4.4 bcm more gas before March, or a fifth of the country’s annual use, at a cost of about $2.2bn."}],[{"start":130.95999999999998,"text":"President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told reporters on Wednesday that Russian forces had struck energy-related targets in Ukraine’s north-eastern Chernihiv, Sumy and Poltava regions 160 times over the past month. "}],[{"start":147.76,"text":"An October 3 attack on facilities in the Kharkiv and Poltava regions was described by Koretskyi as “the most massive and the most aggressive attack since the full-scale invasion started”. He earlier said that a “significant portion” of Naftogaz infrastructure was damaged in the assault, with “some of the destruction” described as critical. A second massive attack on gas infrastructure followed on Sunday, targeting gas storage facilities. "}],[{"start":181.2,"text":"Maxim Timchenko, chief executive of DTEK, Ukraine’s largest private energy company, told the FT that “our assets are being attacked every day. Every day they damage some piece of equipment.”"}],[{"start":null,"text":"