“At around 8:15 pm tonight, a breakdown… caused the significant loss of power in western Cuba and with it the fall of the national electricity system,” the Ministry of Energy and Mines said.
Writing on the social network X, Prime Minister Manuel Marrero Cruz said the government was “working tirelessly” to restore power.
In by now familiar scenes, the streets of Havana were plunged into darkness.
Only a few hotels and private businesses with generators still had lights on, as did essential services such as hospitals.
Angelica Caridad Martinez, a resident of the central city of Camaguey, said she was about to sit down for dinner when the power failed.
“I’m not even hungry anymore,” the 50-year-old said, “This situation is unsustainable, no one can live like this.”
The island of 9.7 million inhabitants has suffered three nationwide blackouts in the final months of 2024, two of them lasting several days.
The repeated outages comes as the island battles its worst economic crisis in 30 years, marked by widespread shortages of food, medicine and fuel, high inflation and a massive outflow of migrants.
Friday night marked the first general blackout of 2025, but citizens face almost daily outages of four or five hours across much of Havana, while in rural provinces the periods without power can last 20 hours or longer.
Cuba’s eight thermal power plants, nearly all of which came online in the 1980s or 1990s, suffer routine failures.
And the Turkish floating power barges that help boost Cuba’s national grid are fed with expensive imported fuel which is often in short supply.
Cuba’s leadership points to a six-decade-long US trade embargo that intensified during Donald Trump’s first presidency for its difficulties in keeping the lights on.
To make up its electricity shortfall, Cuba is racing to install a series of at least 55 solar farms with Chinese technology by the end of this year.
According to authorities, these facilities will generate some 1,200 megawatts of power, about 12 percent of the national total. (AFP)
“At around 8:15 pm tonight, a breakdown… caused the significant loss of power in western Cuba and with it the fall of the national electricity system,” the Ministry of Energy and Mines said.
Writing on the social network X, Prime Minister Manuel Marrero Cruz said the government was “working tirelessly” to restore power.
In by now familiar scenes, the streets of Havana were plunged into darkness.
Only a few hotels and private businesses with generators still had lights on, as did essential services such as hospitals.
Angelica Caridad Martinez, a resident of the central city of Camaguey, said she was about to sit down for dinner when the power failed.
“I’m not even hungry anymore,” the 50-year-old said, “This situation is unsustainable, no one can live like this.”
The island of 9.7 million inhabitants has suffered three nationwide blackouts in the final months of 2024, two of them lasting several days.
The repeated outages comes as the island battles its worst economic crisis in 30 years, marked by widespread shortages of food, medicine and fuel, high inflation and a massive outflow of migrants.
Friday night marked the first general blackout of 2025, but citizens face almost daily outages of four or five hours across much of Havana, while in rural provinces the periods without power can last 20 hours or longer.
Cuba’s eight thermal power plants, nearly all of which came online in the 1980s or 1990s, suffer routine failures.
And the Turkish floating power barges that help boost Cuba’s national grid are fed with expensive imported fuel which is often in short supply.
Cuba’s leadership points to a six-decade-long US trade embargo that intensified during Donald Trump’s first presidency for its difficulties in keeping the lights on.
To make up its electricity shortfall, Cuba is racing to install a series of at least 55 solar farms with Chinese technology by the end of this year.
According to authorities, these facilities will generate some 1,200 megawatts of power, about 12 percent of the national total. (AFP)