Third nationwide blackout in March underscores fragile infrastructure, fuel shortages, and escalating geopolitical tensions tied to U.S. sanctions and global oil disruptions.
Cuba’s national power grid collapsed for the third time in March, leaving millions without electricity and intensifying concerns over the island’s worsening energy crisis and fragile infrastructure.
The latest outage, triggered by a failure at the Nuevitas thermoelectric plant in Camagรผey province, cascaded across the grid and plunged the entire country into darkness, according to Cuban energy authorities.
Officials scrambled to restore service by activating localized “micro-islands” of generation to supply critical facilities such as hospitals and water systems, but the widespread disruption highlights systemic vulnerabilities that have been building for years.
This blackout marks the second nationwide outage in a week and the third this month—an alarming pace that signals structural failure rather than isolated incidents.

















