February 11, 2026

During the Ukrainian Week in the US, the UR³ strategy (Recovery–Reconstruction–Rebuilding) was presented to international partners as a national framework of Ukraine recovery in the context of war. It is not a separate program or list of projects but an effort to form a single logic of actions for the state, regions, communities, international partners and businesses.
UR³ is described as a coordinated input point for international partners which allows joining the financial resources, managerial decision, and development priorities in a single system of coordinates. Practically, this means gradual transition from versatile initiatives to a managed recovery model where not only the amounts of aid are of importance but also how the processes of project implementation are organized.
Such a strategy creates preconditions for communities for a better synchronization of local projects with national priorities and international support programs. Simultaneously, it raises the requirements for the project preparation quality, procedure transparency, and clear role distribution among the process parties. Such logic views the reconstruction not as a quantity of construction works but as a system of interrelated decisions where the output depends on coordinated actions at all levels.
UR³ concept also reflects a general tendency toward international partners expecting to work with Ukraine through structured and predictable mechanisms with settled procedures. It adds significance to professional preparation of projects, engineering expertise, and risk management, whose absence makes complex infrastructure projects prone to delays and adjustments.
Thus, UR³ can be treated as a step toward an institutional formalization of recovery processes, a transition from declarations to the model with a main part played by coordinated rules, planning quality, and responsibility for the result. In these conditions, the role of professional support of the client and clearly outlined processes of project delivery is becoming not just an additional option but a component making the whole recovery system sustainable.