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Havana is riding a bike boom while the US cuts off fuel to Cuba

Havana residents are repairing threadbare tires on their old bikes and in some cases learning to ride as fuel becomes scarcer in Cuba due to the U.S. taking over Venezuela's oil.

Venezuela, which was a "key" ally of Cuba, was the island's main source of fuel and crude oil for over a quarter of a century. That is, until January, when the U.S. captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

Cubans are now in a survival mode due to the drying up of this supply. They have to deal with longer blackouts, rising prices for transportation and food as well as?fuel - if it's even available. Recently, fuel shipments from Mexico to Cuba were also stopped after the U.S. threatened to impose tariffs on countries that provide oil to the island. Havana residents are turning more and more to electric cars and installing solar panels on their homes and businesses.

Gabriela Barbon (23), was persuaded to ride a bicycle for the first time by her ballooning transportation costs.

She said, "Riding a bicycle is not just a hobby for me or something that I wanted to do'sometime in my life. It's a need," during a Citykleta-hosted training in a park in the city. Other adults were also learning how to balance on two wheels.

She said, "The Learn to Pedal Campaign came just at the right time. Just when I needed it."

Citykleta's organizer Yasser Gonzales expected 100 people to join, but it has drawn nearly four times that number - most of whom are looking for alternative ways to travel around the Cuban capital.

He said that there was an "avalanche" of people wanting to learn, while a colleague helped a newbie on a blue bike.

Yoandris Herera is no stranger to cycling. He has kept his bike disassembled in his bedroom for over a year.

Herrera now pedals his China-made bike to work, and takes his children to school.

He said, "Considering that fuel is so costly right now, it would be more convenient to travel by bicycle."

Fuel crisis also brought more work to bicycle repairman Pedro Carrillo. He carefully aligned spokes on a wheel in a makeshift workshop?on a Havana street, with bicycle tire hanging?on the wall?behind him.

He said, "It has been like a?explosion." He said that the bike boom has also led to a different type of scarcity. Sometimes I can't help because I don’t have the parts. "There are some things I just can't find anywhere." Reporting by Alien Fernandez in Havana, writing by Daina Beth Solon; editing by Ethan Smith

(source: Reuters)