The elected president of Venezuela Edmundo González Urrutia had to flee to Spain and is currently in exile in that country after the regime issued an arrest warrant against him for subversion. González Urrutia obtained 67% of the votes in the election day of July 28, against 30% for Nicolás Maduro with 83.5% of the votes verified with published tally sheets, winning in all states (source: resultadosconvzla.com). We reject the arrest warrant, and the fraud intended by the National Electoral Council – CNE of Venezuela, proclaiming Nicolás Maduro as president-elect for a new presidential term and its ratification by the Supreme Court of Justice-TSJ, both without showing the voting minutes or any other support.  EnergiesNet ” Latin America & Caribbean web portal with news and information on Energy, Oil, Gas, Renewables, Engineering, Technology, and Environment.– Contact : Elio Ohep, editor at  EnergiesNet@gmail.com +584142763041-   The elected president of Venezuela Edmundo González Urrutia had to flee to Spain and is currently in exile in that country after the regime issued an arrest warrant against him for subversion. González Urrutia obtained 67% of the votes in the election day of July 28, against 30% for Nicolás Maduro with 83.5% of the votes verified with published tally sheets, winning in all states (source: resultadosconvzla.com). We reject the arrest warrant, and the fraud intended by the National Electoral Council – CNE of Venezuela, proclaiming Nicolás Maduro as president-elect for a new presidential term and its ratification by the Supreme Court of Justice-TSJ, both without showing the voting minutes or any other support.
10/28 Closing Prices / revised 10/29/2024 08:18 GMT | 10/28 OPEC Basket  $71.59 –$2.22 cents | 10/28 Mexico Basket (MME)  $62.55 –$4.36 cents |  09/30 Venezuela Basket (Merey) $54.91   -$7.24 cents  10/28 NYMEX Light Sweet Crude $67.38 -$4.40 cents | 10/28 ICE Brent Sept $71.42 -$4.63 cents | 10/28 Gasoline RBOB NYC Harbor  $2.9257 -0.113 cents | 10/28 Heating oil NY Harbor  $2.1398 -0.1093 cents | 10/28 NYMEX Natural Gas $2.863 +0.229 cents | 10/18 Active U.S. Rig Count (Oil & Gas) = 585 0 | 10/29 USD/MXN Mexican Peso 20.0092 (data live) 10/29 EUR/USD  1.0814 (data live) | 10/29 US/Bs. (Bolivar)  $41.73610000 (data BCV) | Source: WTRG/MSN/Bloomberg/MarketWatch

Cuba Grid Collapses Again, Tropical Storm Oscar Grazes Eastern End of Island (video)

Watch Reuters video: A sign lits a blacked out street during the second day of the nationwide blackout in Havana Oct. 19.
Watch Reuters video: A sign lits a blacked out street during the second day of the nationwide blackout in Havana Oct. 19. (Adalberto Roque/AFP)

Dave Sherwood, Reuters

HAVANA
EnergiesNet.com 10 21 2024

Cuba’s electrical grid collapsed again on Sunday, the fourth such failure in 48 hours, raising fresh doubts about a quick fix on an island already suffering from severe shortages of food, fuel and medicine.

The blackout, after weeks of rolling outages, sparked some small protests around the Caribbean island, where a tropical storm threatened to hamper efforts to restore power.

Cuba’s national electrical grid first crashed around midday on Friday after the island’s largest power plant shut down, sowing chaos and leaving around 10 million people in the dark. The grid has collapsed three times since, underscoring the precarious state of the country’s infrastructure.

The repeated failures mark a major setback in the government’s efforts to quickly restore power to exhausted residents, a majority of which have already suffered from months of blackouts through the Caribbean`s sultry summer.

Cuban president Miguel Diaz-Canel appeared Sunday evening on national television dressed in olive drab military attire, encouraging Cubans to air their grievances over the situation with discipline and civility.

“We are not going to accept nor allow anyone to act with vandalism and much less to alter the tranquility of our people,” said Diaz-Canel, who is rarely seen in uniform.

The capital Havana was entirely blacked out on Sunday evening, with only scattered businesses, bars and homes running on small fuel-fired generators. Most of the city of two million was quiet. Residents played dominoes on the sidewalk, listened to music on battery-powered radios and sat on doorsteps.

A heavy police presence was visible at points throughout the city.

Reuters journalists witnessed several “cacerolazos” – pot-banging protests common in Latin America – in neighborhoods on the outskirts of Havana.

Protesters angry over shortages of food, water and electricity blocked roads with trash heaps in San Miguel de Padron, a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of the city before being dispersed by security forces.

Energy and mines minister Vicente de la O Levy said on Sunday he recognized the blackouts were bothersome to residents, but said most Cubans understood and supported government efforts to restore power.

“It is Cuban culture to cooperate,” O Levy told reporters on Sunday. “Those isolated and minimal incidents that do exist, we catalog them as incorrect, as indecent.”

Earlier on Sunday, Cuba had restored power to 160,000 clients in Havana just prior to the grid’s Sunday collapse, giving some residents a glimmer of hope.

The day took a turn for the worse late in the afternoon, however, when another total grid collapse forced authorities to start again from scratch, raising the specter of a several more days of widespread outages.

Cuba's electrical grid collapses again amid restoration efforts
Cars drive on Havana’s seafront boulevard Malecon as the country’s electrical grid collapsed again on Sunday, according to Cuba’s energy and mines ministry, in the latest setback to the government’s efforts to restore power to the island, in Havana, Cuba October 20, 2024. Reuters/Norlys Perez

Officials initially said power would be restored by Monday or Tuesday. It was not immediately clear how much the latest setback would delay the government’s efforts.

Those efforts were also hampered by Tropical Storm Oscar, which made landfall on the Caribbean island on Sunday, bringing strong winds, a powerful storm surge and rain to parts of eastern Cuba.

The Communist-run government canceled school through Wednesday – a near unprecedented move in Cuba – citing the hurricane and the ongoing energy crisis. Officials said only essential workers should report to work on Monday.

RISING TENSIONS

Housewife Anabel Gonzalez, of old Havana, a neighborhood popular with tourists, said she was growing desperate after three days without power.

“My cell phone is dead and look at my refrigerator. The little that I had has all gone to waste,” she said, pointing to bare shelves in her two-room home.

Others complained they had not received water since blackouts began.

Internet traffic dropped off sharply in Cuba over the weekend, according to data from internet monitoring group NetBlocks, as vast power outages made it all but impossible for most island residents to charge phones and get online.

The government has blamed weeks of worsening blackouts – as long as 10 to 20 hours a day across much of the island – on deteriorating infrastructure, fuel shortages and rising demand.

Cuba also blames the U.S. trade embargo, as well as sanctions instituted by then-President Donald Trump, for ongoing difficulties in acquiring fuel and spare parts to operate and maintain its oil-fired plants.

The U.S. has denied any role in the grid failures.

Cuba depends on imports to feed its largely obsolete, oil-fired power plants. Fuel deliveries to the island have dropped significantly this year as Venezuela, Russia and Mexico, once important suppliers, have slashed their exports to Cuba.

Ally Venezuela – struggling to supply its own market – cut by half its deliveries of subsidized fuel to Cuba this year, forcing the island to search for more costly oil on the spot market.

Mexico, another frequent supplier, appeared also to have cut fuel flows to Cuba during a presidential election year.

Recently elected President Claudia Sheinbaum has not said if the state-supported supply to Cuba will continue under same terms under her administration.

Reporting by Dave Sherwood; additional reporting by Marc Frank, Carlos Carrillo and Nelson Acosta in Havana and Marianna Parraga in Houston; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Stephen Coates

reuters.com 10 21 2024

Share this news

Support EnergiesNet.com

By Elio Ohep · Launched in 1999 under Petroleumworld.com

Information & News on Latin America’s Energy, Oil, Gas, Renewables, Climate, Technology, Politics and Social issues

Contact : editor@petroleuworld.com


CopyRight©1999-2021, EnergiesNet.com™  / Elio Ohep – All rights reserved
 

This site is a public free site and it contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of business, environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have chosen to view the included information for research, information, and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission fromPetroleumworld or the copyright owner of the material.