Cuba slowly begins to restore power after Hurricane Ian knocks out grid
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[September 28, 2022]
By Dave Sherwood
HAVANA, Cuba (Reuters) - Cuba had slowly
begun to restore power across the eastern end of the island, the state
electricity provider said early on Wednesday, after Hurricane Ian caused
the country's grid to collapse, turning off the lights for more than 11
million people.
Cuba's already frail grid, largely dependent on antiquated, Soviet-era
oil-fired generation plants, had been faltering for months ahead of the
storm. But officials said Hurricane Ian had proven too much, knocking
out power even in far eastern Cuba, which was largely unaffected by the
storm.
By early morning Wednesday, officials said some power had been restored
to the areas with the least storm damage.
"There has been a greater advance in the restoration of the {National
Electric System} in the eastern region, since the transmission and
distribution network are integrated without being affected by the
passage of Ian," the power provider said in a statement on local media.
Further west in Cuba, nearer the capital Havana, the process would be
slower and more "complicated," the generator said.
Havana caught the tail end of Ian as it barreled off the island and into
the Gulf of Mexico towards Florida, leaving the city of more than 2
million strewn with a tangled mess of downed trees, trash and electrical
and telephone wire.
Large waves and gusty winds continued to lash the city early on
Wednesday as workers began to clear roadways.
"A significant part of the transmission network was damaged," the
generator in a statement, particularly, it noted, in the far western end
of the country, hardest hit by Ian.
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A downed pole is seen on the street in
the aftermath of Hurricane Ian's passage through Pinar del Rio,
Cuba, September 27, 2022. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
Cuba's grid is divided into three main regions, west, central and
east, which are served by large, centralized oil-fired plants. There
are also small groups of diesel-fired generators that are used as
backup systems when the larger generators fail.
Those would be key in restoring power further west, in the areas
hardest hit by the storm, the generator said, until the entire grid
was back online.
"Once generation is achieved in the three regions, they will all be
able to be linked to the National Electric System, which will allow
the largest amount of built-in load to be restored and all the
service that has not been affected by Hurricane Ian will be
restored," the generator said.
The state-run agency did not give an estimate for when power would
be restored to Havana or points west.
Ian, which left a swath of destruction and at least two dead across
western Cuba, has now strengthened into an extremely dangerous
Category 4 hurricane, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said on
Wednesday.
The NHC put the hurricane's location around 75 miles (125 km)
west-southwest of Naples, Florida with maximum sustained winds of
140 miles per hour (220 km per hour). The massive storm was expected
to crash ashore into Florida on Wednesday evening south of Tampa
Bay, somewhere between Sarasota and Naples.
(Reporting by Dave Sherwood in Havana; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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