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Cuba working to restore electrical service after 2nd grid collapse

storyp1> HAVANA, Oct 19 (Reuters) Cuba's government said it was working once again to restore electrical service across the island after staterun media previously on Saturday reported the national grid had collapsed for a second time in 24 hours.

The country's top electrical energy official, Lazaro Guerra, stated on a morning TV news program that another grid malfunction in western Cuba had actually required technicians to begin once again connecting three essential power plants to the system, briefly stalling development.

I can not assure you that we will have the ability to complete linking the system today, but we are estimating that there need to be important development today, Guerra said.

Simply prior to Guerra's declaration, CubaDebate, among the island's state-run media outlets, stated the grid operator, UNE, had actually reported a overall disconnection of the national electro-energetic system.

Guerra did not straight verify the overall collapse, leaving some confusion as to just what had taken place.

Cuba's electrical grid initially failed around midday on Friday after among the island's largest power plants shut down, suddenly leaving more than 10 million without power.

Even before the grid's collapse, an electrical energy deficiency on Friday had required Cuba's communist-run federal government to send non-essential state workers home and cancel school classes for kids as it looked for to save fuel for generation.

But lights started to flicker on in spread pockets throughout the island early in the evening on Friday, using some hope that power would be restored.

Cuba's federal government has actually blamed weeks of worsening blackouts - typically 10 to 20 hours a day across much of the island - on degrading infrastructure, fuel scarcities and rising need.

Strong winds that started with Typhoon Milton last week had likewise complicated the island's ability to deliver scarce fuel from boats offshore to feed its power plants, authorities have said.

Fuel deliveries to the island have dropped off considerably this year, as Venezuela, Russia and Mexico, once key suppliers, have decreased their exports to Cuba.

Key ally Venezuela slashed by half its shipments of subsidized fuel to Cuba this year, requiring the island to browse somewhere else for far more expensive oil on the spot market.

Cuba's federal government likewise blames the U.S. trade embargo, along with sanctions under then-President Donald Trump, for ongoing problems in acquiring fuel and extra parts to run and preserve its oil-fired plants.

The United States on Friday rejected any function in the grid collapse in Cuba.


(source: Reuters)