Ukraine Energy Security Marshall Plan

Powering Freedom. Protecting Lives. Ending Energy Blackmail.

The Urgency

Fossil fuels have become weapons in the hands of autocrats.
Putin’s war on Ukraine is fueled — literally — by oil and gas revenues. Every day, this dependence costs lives, threatens democracies, and destabilizes global security.

We cannot wait for the war to end.
Millions of Ukrainians are already enduring freezing winters without heat or electricity. Over 9 million people have been forced to leave their homes.

The solution is clear: Rebuild Ukraine’s energy system with clean, resilient, decentralized power — ending reliance on fossil fuels and creating an unshakable foundation for peace and prosperity.

Our Plan in Action

Policy & Legislation

Advocate for an international Ukraine Energy Security Marshall Plan law — starting in the U.S., EU, UK, and Australia

Direct Aid

Deploy immediate energy solutions to keep Ukraine powered today

Partnerships

Expand Sister City and State agreements to build infrastructure, share expertise, and ensure accountability at every step

WHY CLEAN ENERGY WINS

Clean Energy

  • 🌱 Resilient against attacks — no single point of failure
  • 🌎 Reduces climate risks and energy costs
  • ⚡ Increases energy independence
  • 🏘 Powers communities even off-grid

Fossil Fuels

  • 💰 Fund autocratic regimes
  • 🎯 Vulnerable to missile and drone strikes
  • 📉 Volatile prices and supply disruptions
  • 🏭 Lock nations into outdated, polluting systems

Global Impact


Ukraine has the capacity to power Europe six times over with its wind energy potential.
Rebuilding with clean energy will:

  • Strengthen European and global energy independence
  • Undermine authoritarian regimes reliant on oil and gas
  • Serve as a model for other nations in crisis
  • Reduce global displacement — now at 100 million people worldwide

The technologies, supply chains, and policies developed here will help countries everywhere break free from fossil fuel dependency.

The China Factor


While Ukraine fights for its future, China invests 75% of its Belt and Road energy funds in oil and gas — only 1% in solar and wind.
Rebuilding Ukraine with renewable power will:

  • Showcase the benefits of clean energy leadership
  • Expose the dangers of fossil fuel dependency
  • Inspire other nations to follow a secure, sustainable path
Interview by Silicon Curtain

Russia’s War on Energy and How it Uses Winter as a Weapon

December 6, 2024 YouTube interview with Alex Cornell du Houx and Dr. Ievgeniia Kopytsia

Dr. Ievgeniia Kopytsia

Dr Ievgeniia Kopytsia is a law scholar specializing in environmental, climate and energy law from international, EU and Ukrainian perspectives. Her research focuses on climate change and net zero legal dilemmas in the poly-crises era.

Dr Ievgeniia Kopytsia also serves as an Associate Professor at Yaroslav Mudryi National Law University, where she leads “Sustainable Law and Policy Research Centre” and coordinates Europe-Ukraine Energy Transition Hub – an international consortium aiming to leverage the green reconstruction of Ukraine and provide support to strengthen Ukraine’s governance, regulatory frameworks, and market mechanisms in the field of energy, sustainability, and climate action.


Alex Cornell du Houx

Former Maine State Representative Alex Cornell du Houx served on the Energy Utilities and Technology and Legal and Veterans Affairs committees, sponsoring 14 successful pieces of legislation and co-sponsoring 98 successful bills. 

He won the REED award for the best national Public Affairs Campaign for his work co-founding Operation Free, a coalition of lawmakers and veterans promoting energy security. 

Cornell du Houx participated in and led State Department delegations to Southeast Asia to foster government-to-government relations, is a Kentucky Colonel, a senior advisor to the Veterans Campaign, and Partner with the Truman National Security Project. He has provided value-based communications, empathy-based fundraising, and EQ & Public Leadership training worldwide. 

Alex served in the Marine Corps infantry for seven years.