During the talks, the Ukrainian team also hopes to get clarity from the US on the Russian stance toward US-backed diplomatic efforts to end the war, Zelenskiy told a news conference in Kyiv alongside Czech President Petr Pavel.
US President Donald Trump told Reuters earlier this week that he may meet with Zelenskiy at the WEF, a meeting which the Ukrainian leader has publicly sought.
Zelenskiy said that Ukraine had completed its part of the work on the documents outlining a "prosperity package" to unlock money for Ukraine's costly post-war recovery, as well as on US security guarantees designed to stop a future Russian attack.
Ukrainian officials have said the country will need $US800 billion ($A1.2 trillion) for its post-war reconstruction.
Trump, who has often criticised Zelenskiy, said on Wednesday that Russia was ready for a peace deal and that he viewed the Ukrainian leader as the obstacle to peace, an assessment which stands in stark contrast with that of European allies.
The US administration has pushed Ukraine to agree to a peace framework that it will then present to Russia, while Ukraine and its European allies have sought to ensure that Ukraine will not be attacked again by Russia in future.
On Friday, Zelenskiy said Russia was stalling peace efforts, and cited recent strikes on Ukraine's energy system as proof of the Kremlin's real intentions.
"Each of these strikes against our energy sector and our cities quite clearly shows Russia's real interests and intentions: they are not interested in agreements but in the further destruction of Ukraine," he posted on social media after the news conference.
Ukraine's capital Kyiv has only about half the electricity that it needs following waves of Russian attacks on its infrastructure, mayor Vitali Klitschko told Reuters on Friday.
Kyiv, one of eastern Europe's largest cities, requires 1700 megawatts of electricity to power the services for its 3.6 million people, Klitschko said.
Klitschko said the current energy crisis was the most difficult challenge facing the capital in the nearly four years since Russia's invasion in February 2022.
"It's the first time in the history of our city that, in such severe frosts, most of the city was left without heating and with a huge shortage of electricity," Klitschko, a former world heavyweight boxing champion, said in an interview in his office at the heart of Kyiv.
Klitschko said Ukraine's international partners had rushed in additional generators and repair teams had worked round the clock to restore heating following a Russian strike last week knocked out supplies to 6000 apartment buildings.
About 100 buildings still have no heating, he said.