Cuba begins recovery efforts after second grid collapse in a week


Mirna Clavijo, 84, and her daughter Isabel Gutierrez, 61, cook dinner as Cuba's national electric grid collapsed for the second time in a week amid the U.S.-imposed oil blockade, according to officials, as the communist government struggles to keep the lights on for about 10 million people with decrepit infrastructure, in Havana, Cuba, March 21, 2026. REUTERS/Norlys Perez

HAVANA, March 22 (Reuters) - Cuba said ⁠it had begun efforts early on Sunday to restore power after its grid collapsed for the second time ⁠in a week amid a U.S. oil blockade that has dealt a major blow to the ‌island's already ailing energy infrastructure.

The grid collapsed Saturday evening at 6:32 p.m. (2232 GMT) after a major power plant in Nuevitas, in eastern Cuba's Camaguey province, failed and went offline, grid operator UNE said, causing a cascade effect that knocked out power to the nation's approximately 10 million people.

Cuba's energy ​and mines ministry said early on Sunday it had established microsystems - smaller, ⁠closed circuits - in all of the island's provinces ⁠to restore power for vital services like hospitals, water supply and food distribution.

The country's two gas-fired power plants, operated by ⁠Energas, ‌were running in Varadero and Boca de Jaruco, and electricity had reached the nearby Santa Cruz oil-fired plant, the energy ministry said on social media.

Shortly after sunrise on Sunday, the streets of the capital Havana were crowded ⁠with early risers sitting on doorsteps, lamenting the situation with neighbors and ​swatting mosquitoes in cool weather under ‌clear skies.

"Life doesn't change. We're stuck in the same rut," said Havana resident Leoni Alberto, who said ⁠he was forced to ​cook with firewood at least twice a week due to the outages. "It's absolute madness. There's no other way around it."

Cellular service and internet was almost entirely unavailable in most areas, leaving many without communication of any kind.

Cuban prime minister Manuel Marrero said the recovery effort ⁠was taking place under "very complex circumstances."

TWICE IN A WEEK

Cuba's electrical grid ​has been teetering on the edge of collapse and unreliable for months, leaving the island's residents in the dark for hours a day, and sometimes longer, even in better times.

But Saturday's blackout incident marks the third major power outage this month, as ⁠a majority of the system went down on March 4 when a key thermoelectric generating plant failed. The power grid also went completely offline on Monday for unexplained reasons.

Cuba has experienced a series of total outages in recent years, but two nationwide blackouts in the space of a week is exceptional.

U.S. President Donald Trump began taking measures to block oil from ​reaching the Caribbean island after Washington deposed Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on January ⁠3. Venezuela had previously provided oil to its close ally on favorable terms.

Since then, Trump has cut off Venezuelan exports to ​Cuba and threatened other countries with punitive tariffs if they sell oil to ‌the island.

Cuba has long blamed the U.S. trade embargo for ​economic failures including its obsolete power grid, while Washington has attributed the shortfalls to Cuba's Soviet-style command economy.

(Reporting by Dave Sherwood in Havana; additional reporting by Anett Rios and Alien Fernandez, Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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