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After the earthquakes in Venezuela, power outages have slowed down operations at key ports and plants

Sources said that an outage this week on a power transmission line in Venezuela's Central Region is slowing down efforts to restore?full services at a port, refinery, and petrochemical complex following earthquakes.

Residents and sources said that many roads have reopened, and electricity has been restored to areas affected by the earthquakes. The death toll is now at almost 600, but residents and sources say the area closest to the epicenter, in the central region, remains largely without power.

Sources said that the lack of electricity is preventing injured people from being transported, hospitals from operating, goods imported at ports discharged, aid distributed, fuel and petrochemicals produced, and fuel and petrochemicals manufactured.

The 146,000-barrel-per-day ?El Palito refinery on Friday remained almost completely out of service due to lack of power, while the restart of ?the Moron Petrochemical Complex, the country's second-largest, was progressing slowly for the same reason, ?workers from those facilities said.

They added that the?Planta Centro' and Termocentro' power plants located in central region were unable to restore the entire number of units in operation before the earthquakes.

Separate sources reported that due to insufficient electricity, only partial operations were possible at Puerto Cabello on Friday. This left a queue of trucks waiting to receive and deliver imported goods.

The La Guaira Port, where the Government used to receive an important portion of?imports remained closed.

The authorities have given little information about the state of ports and industrial plants, but on Thursday they said that some power plants as well as the Moron Complex were trying to restart.

Requests for comments from the oil and information Ministries and?utility Corpoelec were not immediately answered.

The large infrastructure damage reported by social media and sources at Maiquetia airport has not yet been confirmed. However, some airlines have temporarily suspended flights or re-organized them to other airports around the country.

According to a source close to the preparations, the government hopes to reopen Maiquetia in early July with limited services. Reporting by Tibisay Roma, Mircely Guianipa Mariela Nava Marianna Pararaga. Editing by Julia Symmes Cobb & Chris Reese.

(source: Reuters)