Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which is now entering its eighth week, had brought down 30% of the country’s infrastructure so far, a senior minister said. The cost of the damaged infrastructure is nearly $100 billion.

Oleksander Kubrakov, the Minister of Infrastructure in Ukraine, told Reuters that “practically all components of our transport infrastructure have suffered in one form or another.”

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The minister, however, also offered a long-term solution to recover the costs. Kubrakov said that if all reconstruction of the lost infrastructure is funded by the frozen Russian assets, the process can be completed within two years.

He said, “20% to 30% of all infrastructure with varying degrees of damage, with different levels of destruction.” This damaged infrastructure included over 300 national road bridges, more than 8,000 km of roads and dozens of railway bridges.

“If we talk about roads, bridges and residential buildings, I believe that almost everything can be rebuilt in two years … if everyone works quickly,” Ukrainian Infrastructure Minister Kubrakov told Reuters in an interview.

The ministry had already kicked off reconstruction work in areas that had either been taken back from Russian forces or those that were never lost by Ukraine.

Russia’s latest bid to damage Ukrainian infrastructure was in Lviv, a city located on the Polish border and Western parts of Ukraine. Lviv.

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Moscow said its missiles struck more than 20 military targets, including ammunition depots, command headquarters and groups of troops and vehicles, while its artillery hit an additional 315 targets and its warplanes conducted 108 strikes, according to reports from Associated Press.

A Lviv hotel sheltering Ukrainians who had fled the fighting in other parts of the country was also badly damaged, Mayor Andriy Sadovyi said. The city has seen its population swell with elderly people, mothers and children trying to escape the war.