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Cuba starts recovery efforts following second grid failure in a week

Cuba announced that it had begun early Sunday efforts to restore power to its grid after it collapsed for the?second time in a week amid a U.S. Oil Blockade which?has? dealt a major blow?to the island's ailing energy infrastructure.

Grid operator UNE reported that the grid collapsed at 6:32 p.m. on Saturday night (2232 GMT), after a large power plant in Nuevitas in eastern Cuba's Camaguey Province failed and went offline. This caused a cascade of events which knocked out electricity to approximately 10 million Cubans.

Cuba's Energy and Mines Ministry announced early Sunday that it had installed microsystems, smaller closed circuits, in all the provinces of the island to restore power and vital services such as hospitals, water distribution and food distribution.

Energy ministry on social media said that the country's two gas fired power plants operated by Energas were operating in Varadero Boca de Jaruco. Electricity had also reached the nearby Santa Cruz Oil-fired Plant.

Early Sunday morning, Havana's streets were nearly completely dark. Residents sat at their doorsteps, talking with neighbors, and swatting away mosquitoes. The skies were mostly clear, lit by bright stars.

In most places, cellular service and internet are almost non-existent. Many people have no way to communicate.

Twice in a Week

Cuba's electrical system has been unstable and on the verge of collapse for several months. Residents have had to endure power outages for many hours each day and even longer in good times. The Saturday blackout is the third major outage in the month. On March 4, a "key thermoelectric generator" failed, and the entire system was down. On Monday, the power grid went offline for unknown reasons.

Cuba has experienced a number of blackouts, but to have two in a single week is a rare occurrence.

Donald Trump began taking steps to prevent oil from reaching the Caribbean Island after Washington?deposed Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro on Jan. 3. Venezuela was Cuba's biggest benefactor. It provided oil on favorable terms to its close ally.

Since then, Trump has cut Venezuelan oil exports to Cuba off and threatened other nations with punitive tariffs for selling oil to the island.

Cuba has blamed the U.S. embargo on its economic problems, including the outdated power grid. Washington attributes the failures to Cuba's Soviet style command economy. (Reporting and editing by Hugh Lawson in Havana)

(source: Reuters)