Two new residents of Western Ukrainian Industrial Hub plan to start construction on expanded park areas in H1 2026
The Western Ukrainian Industrial Hub industrial park (Ternopil region) is completing the approval of agreements to attract two new residents, an agro-processing enterprise and a packaging manufacturing plant, Deputy Chair of the Verkhovna Rada Committee on Economic Development Dmytro Kysylevsky reported.
"The Western Ukrainian Industrial Hub industrial park has expanded its area from 10.6 hectares to 55 hectares. The old site is fully built up with industrial premises totaling 71,000 square meters. The park is currently completing the approval of agreements to attract two new residents, an agro-processing enterprise and a packaging plant. The start of construction is scheduled for the first half of 2026," he wrote on his Facebook page on Tuesday.
The new residents, whose names are not being disclosed, will locate their production facilities on the park's new site, occupying 5 hectares and 10 hectares, respectively.
Kysylevsky said that to connect an additional 10 MW of electrical capacity to the new site, the Western Ukrainian Industrial Hub plans to use a state program that provides co-financing from the state budget on a 50:50 basis.
"For wastewater disposal, the industrial park has its own treatment facilities, which is an important advantage for food production," the lawmaker said.
He recalled that as of December 2025, four participants and 22 other residents are operating at the Western Ukrainian Industrial Hub industrial park, which specializes in agro-processing.
The park hosts the Delta-Food Industry plant (sauce and oil production), Nasha Ptytsia (meat products), Ternopil Meat Processing Plant (meat products), and Babusia Marusia (processing and canning of fruits and vegetables). A total of 860 jobs have been created at the park.
As reported, the Western Ukrainian Industrial Hub industrial park, with an area of more than 10 hectares, was established in 2022 on the territory of a meat processing plant that had not operated for more than 10 years but retained strong engineering and logistics infrastructure.
Currently, the park has 71,000 square meters of reconstructed industrial premises with ceiling heights of 5–10 meters, 11 artesian wells for water supply, wastewater treatment facilities, and its own 10 MW substation.