Cuba grid collapses again, hurricane piles on misery

21 October 2024 - 11:30 By Dave Sherwood
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People walk during a blackout as the country's electrical grid collapsed again on Sunday, according to Cuba's energy and mines ministry, in the latest setback to the government's efforts to restore power to the island, in Havana, Cuba, on October 20 2024.
People walk during a blackout as the country's electrical grid collapsed again on Sunday, according to Cuba's energy and mines ministry, in the latest setback to the government's efforts to restore power to the island, in Havana, Cuba, on October 20 2024.
Image: REUTERS/Norlys Perez

Cuba's electrical grid collapsed again on Sunday, the fourth such failure in 48 hours, with a hurricane making landfall to compound the island's misery and threaten further havoc on its decrepit infrastructure.

Cuba earlier on Sunday said it was making headway restoring service after multiple false starts, though millions of people remained without electricity more than two days after the grid's initial collapse.

“Restoration work began immediately,” the energy and mines ministry said on X.

Hurricane Oscar made landfall on the Caribbean island on Sunday, bringing strong wind, a powerful storm surge and rain to parts of eastern Cuba and threatening to further complicate the government's efforts to reestablish service.

Cuba's meteorological survey warned of “an extremely dangerous situation” in eastern Cuba, while the US National Hurricane Centre reported wind of 120km/h as the storm made its way across the island.

“On the forecast track, the centre of Oscar is expected to continue moving across eastern Cuba tonight [Sunday] and Monday, then emerge off the northern coast of Cuba late on Monday and cross the central Bahamas on Tuesday,” the Hurricane Centre said.

The Communist-run government cancelled school until Wednesday — a near unprecedented move in Cuba — citing the hurricane and the ongoing energy crisis. Officials said only essential workers should report to work on Monday.

The repeated grid collapses marked a major setback in the government's efforts to quickly restore power to exhausted residents already suffering from severe shortages of food, medicine and fuel.

The multiple setbacks in the first 48 hours also underscored the complexity of the work and the still precarious state of the country's grid. Cuba had restored power to 160,000 clients in Havana just before the grid's Sunday collapse, giving some residents a glimmer of hope.

Housewife Anabel Gonzalez, of old Havana, a neighbourhood popular with tourists, said she was getting desperate after three days without power. “My cellphone is dead and look at my refrigerator. The little that I had has all gone to waste,” she said, pointing to bare shelves in her two-room home.

Energy and mines minister Vicente de la O Levy told reporters on Sunday he expected the grid to be fully functional by Monday or Tuesday but warned residents not to expect dramatic improvements. It was not immediately clear how much the latest setback would delay the government's efforts.

Cuba's national electrical grid crashed about midday on Friday after the island's largest power plant shut down, sowing chaos. The grid collapsed again on Saturday morning, state-run media reported. By early evening on Saturday, authorities reported some progress restoring power before announcing another partial grid collapse.

Reuters reporters witnessed two small protests overnight after a grid failure left Havana in the dark late on Saturday, one on the outskirts of the capital in Marianao and the other in the more central Cuatro Caminos. Various videos of protests elsewhere in the capital began to crop up on social media late on Saturday, though Reuters was not able to verify their authenticity.

O Levy said the blackouts were bothersome to residents but most Cubans understood and supported government efforts to restore power. “It is Cuban culture to co-operate,” O Levy told reporters on Sunday. “Those isolated and minimal incidents that exist, we catalogue them as incorrect, as indecent.”

Internet traffic dropped off sharply in Cuba over the weekend, according to data from internet monitoring group NetBlocks, as vast power outages made it all but impossible for most island residents to charge phones and get online. “Network data show that Cuba remains largely offline as the island experiences a second nationwide power outage,” NetBlocks said on Saturday.

The government has blamed weeks of worsening blackouts — as long as 10 to 20 hours a day across much of the island — on deteriorating infrastructure, fuel shortages and rising demand.

Cuba also blames the US trade embargo, as well as sanctions instituted by then-president Donald Trump, for ongoing difficulties in acquiring fuel and spare parts to operate and maintain its oil-fired plants. The US has denied any role in the grid failures.

Cuba depends on imports to feed its largely obsolete, oil-fired power plants. Fuel deliveries to the island have dropped significantly this year as Venezuela, Russia and Mexico, once important suppliers, have slashed their exports to Cuba.

Ally Venezuela — struggling to supply its own market — cut by half its deliveries of subsidised fuel to Cuba this year, forcing the island to search for more costly oil on the spot market. Mexico, another frequent supplier, appeared also to have cut fuel flows to Cuba during a presidential election year.

Recently elected President Claudia Sheinbaum has not said if the state-supported supply to Cuba will continue under the same terms under her administration.

Reuters 


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