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Cuba restores electricity to Havana following the second grid failure in a week

Cuban officials announced that the country had restored electricity to almost half of Havana's capital by Sunday afternoon. This was less than 24 hours after the grid collapsed for the second consecutive week due to a U.S. The?oil embargo has caused a serious blow to Cuba's energy infrastructure.

Grid operator UNE reported that the grid went down Saturday night at 6:32 p.m. (2223 GMT) when a major power station in Nuevitas in eastern Cuba's Camaguey Province, went offline. This caused a cascade of events which knocked out electricity to approximately 10 million Cubans.

UNE reported that by Sunday afternoon, nearly 500,000 homes, businesses and hospitals in Havana – or 55% – were online.

The grid operator is also preparing the largest oil-fired plant in the country to start up and expects it to be operational by day's' end. This will dramatically increase generation.

Havana's daily life continued as usual despite the blackouts. These have become part of Havana's routine, even when the grid is working.

Havana resident Leoni A. Alberto said, "We are stuck in the same rut." He said that he had to cook using firewood more than once a week because of the power outages. It's a total madness. "There's no way around it."

Officials said that the power in many areas will remain out for a long time despite efforts to restore it. This is due to a shortage of diesel fuel.

The country's cellular service and internet were still patchy, but many areas had improved by the afternoon.

Yordanis López, a Havana resident, was waiting, along with many others in the waterfront capital of Havana, for the lights on Sunday afternoon. He claimed that the power outage left him in the darkness in many ways.

He said that when the power grid goes down, so do social media networks. You have no idea of what's happening.

Twice in a Week

Cuba's electric grid has been teetering and unstable for months. Blackouts lasting hours and even days are the norm.

The grid failure on Saturday is the third major outage in the month. On March 4, a thermoelectric plant that was a main power source suddenly stopped. On Monday, the power grid went offline for unknown reasons.

Cuba has experienced several 'total blackouts' in recent years. However, two in a single week are exceptional.

Cubans are closely following the tracks of two tankerships with Russian fuel cargoes in the Atlantic, hoping that this will provide relief from the U.S. Blockade. The Hong Kong flagged?vessel Sea Horse appeared to divert away from Cuba this week.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, began to take measures to prevent oil from reaching the Caribbean Island after Washington ousted Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro?on January 3, 2019. Venezuela had provided oil on favorable terms to its close ally, the United States.

Since then, Trump?cutoff Venezuelan exports into Cuba and has threatened other countries with punitive duties if they sold oil to the island.

Cuba has blamed the U.S. embargo on its economic problems, including an outdated power grid. Washington attributes the failures to Cuba's Soviet style command economy. (Reporting from Dave Sherwood, Havana. Additional reporting by Anett and Alien Fernandez. Editing by Hugh Lawson & Diane Craft.

(source: Reuters)