'Agony' in Cuba amid third nationwide blackout in six months

HAVANA - Cuba on Monday suffered its third nationwide power outage since the start of the year, causing mounting despair in the face of an energy collapse precipitated by a US fuel blockade.

The communist island was already struggling to keep the lights on before US President Donald Trump in January cut off its oil supplies, depleting the dwindling supply of fuel for its power plants.

Union Electrica (UNE), the state electricity company, announced a "total disconnection" to the entire island at midday, leaving the communist country's 9.6 million inhabitants without power while not providing a reason. 

It marks the eighth blackout on the island since late 2024.

The lack of fuel "undoubtedly complicates the restoration process," Lazaro Guerra, director of electricity at the Ministry of Energy and Mines, said on state television late Monday without giving a timeline for repairs.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel directly blamed US sanctions policy against the island.

"While the US attempts to trigger social unrest through strangulation by blocking fuel access to Cuba, the UNE is mobilising to reverse the collapse of the National Electric System," the president said.

He added: "The work being done by electrical workers amidst a genocidal energy blockade is heroic."

This latest blackout comes as the state imposes increasingly draconian power cuts across the country -- over 30 hours at a stretch in parts of Havana and over 70 hours in some rural areas -- in an increasingly desperate attempt to conserve fuel.

"Living like this is agony," said Meyboll Font, a 51-year-old self-employed social media community manager.

Font said that her Havana neighbourhood has been surviving on just "three or four hours of power a day" but that the blackout was worse because "you never know when it (electricity) will return."

"We have no WiFi, no electricity, we can't work," said a young software programmer working for a tourism start-up in another neighbourhood.

- Without power -

 

A man transports water containers during a nationwide power outage in Havana on July 6, the third since the start of the year
AFP | YAMIL LAGE

Power outages have been a feature of life for years in Cuba, where the electricity generation system, composed mainly of dilapidated Soviet-era plants, is in shambles.

The blackouts and power cuts have accelerated since the fuel blockade began, with authorities citing a lack of fuel to run the generators that prop up the national grid.

Since January, Washington has only allowed one oil tanker, from Russia, to dock in Cuba, as part of a pressure campaign aimed at ending more than six decades of communist rule in Havana.

Trump points to the US overthrow of Venezuela's socialist president Nicolas Maduro and installation of a Washington-friendly successor as a potential blueprint for what he would like to achieve in Cuba.

Cuba has repeatedly said its political model is not up for discussion and vowed to resist any military invasion.

- Making Cuba 'investable' -

 

Nationwide blackouts and fuel shortages in Cuba have emptied Havana's once colorful streets
AFP | YAMIL LAGE

The US blockade, coupled with a flurry of sanctions on the Cuban state and foreign companies that do business with it, have nudged a country already mired in a generational crisis closer to collapse.

Food, drinking water and medicine are in increasingly short supply, and some surgeries have been put on hold, prompting the United Nations to warn of a humanitarian emergency.

Transport on the island has come to a near standstill.

Last month, the government unveiled a sweeping package of free-market reforms that, if implemented, would dramatically reduce state control over the economy.

A man rides past a solar panel during a nationwide power outage in Havana -- the third such loss of power since January, when the United States imposed a fuel blockade on the island
AFP | YAMIL LAGE

The US State Department dismissed the plans as "superficial smoke signals" and said Trump was holding out for "much more substantial economic and political reforms that would make Cuba investable" and grant Cubans political freedom.

The two sides have held several rounds of talks but Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez last week said they had made "no progress" towards ending the impasse.

On Monday, Havana accused Washington of preventing a debate at the United Nations on its oil blockade and sanctions.

  • by Rigoberto Diaz (AFP)

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