Monday, 06 July 2026 PDT | 07:51 PM
The 1 News Alt Logo Text Smart News for Global Indians

Cuba working to restore power after latest island

AI News July 07, 2026 07:09 AM
Cuba working to restore power after latest island

Cuba working to restore power after latest island-wide outage

No immediate word from officials on cause of latest grid failure

Cuba began to slowly restore power on Monday after the country's national electric grid collapsed earlier in the day, the latest blow to an ‌island already suffering from severe energy, fuel and medicine shortages.

Grid operator UNE said ​it was providing electricity to some vital services, including hospitals and food production centres, but by late afternoon was able to serve only one per cent of the capital Havana's demand.

Officials ​have not yet said what caused the grid ​to collapse.

Cuba has ​for months suffered from hours-long ⁠and, ⁠more recently, days-long ‌power outages linked in part to a decrepit grid and a U.S. imposed oil blockade that ⁠has cut off the island's fuel supply.

The nationwide outage is more bad ‌news for Cubans already exhausted from rolling blackouts that make it impossible for many to work or sleep ​in the Caribbean summer heat.

"Look at my face, it says it all," said Ariel Sotelo, a bleary-eyed 57-year-old Havana resident who had been without electricity since the day before. "We just have to grin ⁠and bear it, but it's not easy."

Nearly two-thirds of the country was already without power when the grid collapsed on Monday, so many of the island's residents, largely without communications and accustomed to the lack ‌of electricity, hardly registered the difference.

A television newscast encouraged the lucky few with access to electricity to spread the word about the collapse of the nation's grid to friends and neighbours without.

The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump cut off fuel shipments from Venezuela to Cuba earlier this year ⁠and also pressured Mexico to halt shipments, and has threatened to slap tariffs on any nation ⁠delivering oil to the island nation.

The U.S. has called Cuba's government a national security threat ⁠and ⁠says such sanctions are necessary ​to force a change in the island's government, a long-time aim of U.S. policy toward Cuba.

Cuba has long maintained it is not a threat to the United States.

For most Cubans, however, the issue is more practical than political.

"The heat, the mosquitoes, it's just unbearable," said Omar Ortega, 60, of Havana. "How long is this going to go on? Honestly, we can't take it anymore."