You're reading: Tuesday’s headlines: State struggles to cover expenses amid shrinking budget revenue, workers begin to dismantle equipment at Chornobyl nuclear power plant

Editor’s Note: In this feature, the Kyiv Post brings together the most relevant events from the morning’s headlines.

Ukraine is finding it
increasingly difficult to cover its expenses
amid twin deficits and falling
year-on-year budget revenue, writes Ekonomichna
Pravda
.

Workers at the Chornobyl nuclear power plant in
Ukraine
have begun dismantling a
ventilation stack that has filtered radioactive gases from the reactor that was
destroyed in an accident in 1986, writes
the New York Times
.

The bank accounts of state-owned Coal of Ukraine have been frozen over Hr 3 billion in unpaid
debt to various banks that date to 2011, writes
Dzerkalo Tyzhnia
citing a court ruling made by Commercial Court of Kyiv.

The price of beet
sugar unexpectedly rose by 9.1 percent
in the last week during the start of the processing season, Kommersant daily reports, citing
several news agencies that cover the agricultural sector.

Delo
business dail
y updated its list of Ukrainian dairy and meat companies

that the Russian authorities have issued export bans, naming 32 altogether. As
of Nov. 5, only seven beef producers out of 24 can export to Russia; four pork
producers, four poultry producers and 17 out of 27 dairy producers can ship
their products to Russia.