This year should be the year of real demining – Volodymyr Bayda
14.07.2025
During the Mine Action Cluster, Volodymyr Bayda, Director of the Humanitarian Demining Center, addressed international partners, representatives of government agencies, and mine action operators (MAOs) with a key message: it is time to focus efforts and resources directly on humanitarian demining work, and not only on preparatory activities.
"Over the past three years, more than $1.2 billion has been invested in the sector. Of these, just over $166 million went directly to field work. This raises a logical question: where did the rest of the money go? As a result, more than $270 million was spent on equipment and training, and more than $500 million on comprehensive PMD projects. Such a skew in the distribution of funding indicates the need for changes in approaches to supporting humanitarian demining," Volodymyr Bayda emphasized.
The Director of the Center emphasized that today there are more than 100 certified PMD operators working in Ukraine, and the market is ready for large-scale cleaning of territories.
"If 2-3 years ago we really needed investments in training, equipment and system development, today it is worth shifting the focus to humanitarian land demining. In addition, targeted projects aimed directly at clearing territories are more difficult to implement today than technical support initiatives. This requires a reorientation of priorities on the part of international partners," said Volodymyr Bayda.
That is why the Center encourages donors and organizations working in the field of mine action to redirect their efforts to funding humanitarian demining work, in order to provide PMD operators with the opportunity to effectively clear the land.
The Director of the Center emphasized that the allocation of resources must meet the challenges:
"We are actively working with PMD operators and relevant associations on how to better scale the state program of compensation for demining costs. We have a vision and know how to do it effectively. But without donor support aimed specifically at field demining work, this cannot be achieved. We need to focus on clearing the territories, not on conversations around it."


