Cuba struggles to restore power to island following nationwide grid collapse


Vehicles drive down a dark street as Cuba's national electric grid collapsed at midday, leaving around 10 million people without power, in Havana, Cuba, July 6, 2026. REUTERS/Norlys Perez

HAVANA, July 7 (Reuters) - Cuba struggled on Tuesday ⁠to restore power after its national grid collapsed ‌the day before, leaving millions still without electricity across the Caribbean island nation.

Authorities have yet to fully explain the cause of the ​Monday blackout — the third to affect ⁠the country this ⁠year — which left an already exhausted population of nearly 10 ⁠million ‌people in the dark overnight.

The country`s grid operator UNE said early on Tuesday it had ⁠reconnected central Cuba to the grid, from ​the western ‌port of Mariel to Sancti Spiritus province, but that ⁠the eastern ​and western extremes of the island remained offline.

About one-third of the capital Havana had seen power restored on ⁠Tuesday morning, though large swaths were ​still without electricity and power was spotty even where it had been restored.

The latest grid collapse comes as the ⁠United States has vastly ratcheted up pressure on Cuba, cutting off the island`s fuel supply and applying severe sanctions in a bid by the Trump administration to ​force a change in Cuba`s communist-run ⁠government.

Cuba and the United Nations have called the Trump ​administration measures illegal and a ‌violation of the human rights of ​the island`s residents.

(Reporting by Dave Sherwood and Ayose Naranjo in Havana; Editing by Andrea Ricci )

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