In recent months, the new grid collapses follows the wires of nationwide blackouts.
Cuba’s national power has collapsed the grid AgainMillions of people without electricity.
Operator Union Electricity (UNE) officials failed (3: 1: 15 GMT) at around noon: 15: 1: 15 at around noon: 15: 1: 15.
During the sunrise on Saturday, the UNE said it was producing only 225 MW or less than 10 percent of the total demand. Officers SAIDs said that parallel circuits are helping to provide electricity to important areas like hospitals.
“There are parallel circuits in many provinces and generator units have started to synchronize,” Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Kannel said on X.
In the last months of 2024, the island of 9.7 million residents had already faced three nationwide blackouts, lasing two days.
The latest grid this year is the first to collapse, but this island is one of its largest financial crisis in 30 years. United States Hit ApprovalCuba depends on the oil of subsidized Venezuela for years, but as a government in Karakas, the supply is increasingly uncertain. Swing with his own financial problems??
“Now, no one knows when the power will come back,” resident Able Bone told a royators news agency on Hawan’s Malacon Waterfront Buleward on Saturday.
People in Hawan are already living with four or five hours of energy cuts, while outside the capital are facing blackouts within 20 hours a day in recent weeks.
“My God, this is terrible, we are for a dark weekend,” said the Year 4 -year -old ice cream vendor Carne Gutrez in Havana to AFP News Agency.
Andress Lopez, a 67 -year -old resident of the Holgine province in the east, further said that he was not expecting another blackout soon.
He said, “It really hurts me. “Let’s see when they come back (power).”
Cuba blames its financial crisis on the acquisition of essential items such as the US trade ban in the Cold War, the web and fuel and spare parts of the rules that complicate financial transactions.
US President Donald Trump recently tightened restrictions on the Government Government, running the island’s Communist Government, and promised to restore a “strict” policy about the long -term enemy of the United States.
In the meantime, for your power shortage, Cuba is racing to install a series of at least 55 solar fields with Chinese technology by the end of this year.
Local authorities have said that these facilities will generate about 5 MW of electricity, which is 5 percent of the national total.

