Bosch finished the 2025 financial year in Ukraine with consolidated third-party sales close to one hundred sixty two million euros, or about seven point six billion hryvnias. The company says the result was higher than a year earlier despite difficult macroeconomic and security conditions.
The local performance is tied to stable demand, a wider partner network and direct participation in recovery projects. For Ukraine, this is not only a corporate result. It shows how international technology suppliers can become part of reconstruction, energy resilience and industrial modernization.
Recovery through practical equipment
Since 2022, Bosch has implemented more than fifty recovery projects in municipal and private sectors. Its work includes modernization of heating systems, industrial boiler supply, energy efficiency projects and support for infrastructure that communities need during wartime.
A separate line is cooperation with GIZ, which continues in 2026 and includes the installation of thirteen modular boiler houses in frontline communities. For towns exposed to attacks and power disruption, such equipment can reduce dependence on vulnerable centralized systems and shorten the path from damage to restored service.
Bosch also invested in skills. Its technical training center held dozens of technical and educational events in 2025, reaching more than two thousand participants. The Power Tools division trained more than five hundred partners and industry specialists.
The company’s Ukrainian strategy now sits at the intersection of business, reconstruction and human capital. If demand for autonomous, energy efficient and industrial solutions keeps rising, suppliers with service networks and training capacity may become especially important for rebuilding Ukraine at scale.
