Fifty -nine dismantled ambulances have been donated to Ukraine by the London ambulance service (Las) since the beginning of the war in 2022, the service said.
The ambulances, which are helping to provide attention to those of Warzones or civilians Kured, have handed over the British-Ukrainian charity.
The last donation of nine ambulances has now delivered the leg to the first line.
Chris Rutherford said: “We are very proud, we can do this and our thoughts remain with our counterparts working in ambulances that take care of those injections in the conflict.”
He added: “The ambulances have reached the end of their service in the capital, but they can still help save lives in Ukraine.”
He said the ambulances were no longer being used by the frontline teams of the, since the service had invested in a fleet or more green vehicles.
The total of 59 includes 10 withdrawal ambulances that were donated at the beginning of the war, when a volunteer team led vehicles full of medical supplies to Poland so that they could be tasks through the border to Ukraine to reinforce humanitarian efforts.
In 2022, 26 the volunteers led 1,100 miles (1,770 km) in three days to deliver the ambulances.
They had a leg full of medical equipment donated from NHS organizations in all London and had included fans, syringe bombs, tourniquets, wound dressings, snowstorm blankets and personal protective equipment.
Since then, Ukrainian drivers have collected ambulances, which have a leg charged in trucks, and have been delivered to where they are needed.
Nadia Pylypchuk of British-Ukrainian Aid said: “In Ukraine, any team or help really matters, whether large or small.
“We cannot thank London’s ambulance service enough for their kind donations that are saving lives.”