On 30 June, the Ukrainian Parliament supported a number of important decisions related to long-term financing, organic production, property valuation and strategic raw materials. For Ukraine’s regions, these are not abstract legislative steps, but practical tools for future recovery, investment and community development.


The Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine continues to shape the legislative foundation for the country’s economic resilience, European integration and post-war recovery.

On 30 June, Parliament supported several decisions that may appear to belong to different policy areas, but together reflect one common logic: Ukraine is already preparing the rules for a stronger economy, more transparent governance, responsible business and full integration into the European space.

Parliamentary decisions of 30 June
Draft Law No. 15172
On securitisation and covered bonds — aimed at developing long-term financing mechanisms, attracting investment and expanding access to capital.
Draft Law No. 13204-1, adopted as a European integration law
On state regulation of organic production, circulation and labelling of organic products — aimed at establishing transparent rules, protecting consumers and helping Ukrainian producers access EU markets.
Draft Law No. 13435
On property valuation — aimed at introducing unified approaches, digitalising procedures, strengthening oversight and increasing investor confidence.
Draft Law No. 15122
On the joint-stock company “Eastern Mining and Processing Plant” — aimed at modernising corporate governance of a strategic enterprise and strengthening the resource base of Ukraine’s nuclear energy sector.

Why this matters

These decisions differ in substance, but they share a common political and economic logic. Ukraine is fighting a war, rebuilding damaged infrastructure, supporting communities, seeking investment and, at the same time, adapting its rules to European standards.

Long-term financing is essential for housing, business, infrastructure and community development. Organic production requires honest labelling and consumer trust. Property valuation must become more transparent, especially in the context of reconstruction, compensation, public asset management and investment attraction. Strategic enterprises such as the Eastern Mining and Processing Plant require a modern model of governance, oversight and accountability.

Comment by Ruslan Shamrin

“Parliamentary work is measured not only by the number of draft laws adopted, but also by whether communities, enterprises and people on the ground will actually feel the impact of these decisions. Long-term financing, transparent property valuation, fair rules for producers and the modernisation of strategic enterprises are exactly the tools that must work not in theory, but in the real economy of Ukraine’s regions.”

The parliamentary dimension

Parliamentary work during wartime is not limited to rapid responses to security, budgetary or defence challenges. It is also about preparing the state for post-war development, investment, European integration and a new quality of governance.

That is why the decisions on Draft Laws No. 15172, No. 13204-1, No. 13435 and No. 15122 should not be viewed merely as separate technical votes. They are part of a broader policy aimed at strengthening Ukraine’s economic capacity.

Ukraine is already creating the rules for a state that must not only withstand the war, but also emerge stronger after victory.

Source: Press Service of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, 30 June 2026.