“We are now confident that we can provide this loan to Ukraine very quickly,” von der Leyen said at her joint press conference with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

The loan must be approved by a majority of EU countries and the European Parliament before the end of the year. The specific amount of the EU loan that will actually be funneled to Ukraine depends on how much other G7 countries are willing to contribute.

The G7 loan will be up to $45 billion, according to the Commission, as Canada, Japan and the U.K. are expected to contribute. There are questions as to whether the U.S. will play a role in the loan due to long-standing concerns that, as a result of the bloc’s sanctions rules, a single EU country can unfreeze the assets every six months therefore putting the loan at risk.

Von der Leyen also addressed Russia’s recent attacks on Ukraine’s civilian energy infrastructure, calling the incidents “blatant and vicious” attempts to “plunge [Ukraine] into the dark.”

“The European Union is here to help you in this challenge: to keep the lights on, to keep your people warm as winter is just around the corner, and to keep your economy going as you fight for your survival,” von der Leyen said.

On Thursday, the European Commission president unveiled Brussels’ winter energy supply plan for Ukraine, which will help repair the damage to energy infrastructure caused by Russian attacks and restore 2.5 gigawatts of capacity this winter, which the EU estimates to be 15 percent of Ukraine’s needs for the season.

The Commission also plans to connect Ukraine to the EU’s electricity grid, so that member countries could export another 2 gigawatts to Kyiv during the winter.

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