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2019 Venezuelan blackouts

Nationwide recurring electrical blackouts in Venezuela began in March 2019. Experts and state-run Corpoelec (Corporación Eléctrica Nacional) sources attribute the electricity shortages to lack of maintenance and to a lack of technical expertise in the country resulting from a brain drain;[3][4][5] Nicolás Maduro's administration attributes them to sabotage.[6][7][8] Since March, various nationwide blackouts occurred in the country.[9]

A light map of Venezuela on the night of 7 March 2019 and the night of 8 March 2019.[a]

The first widespread blackout began on 7 March 2019 at 4:56 pm local time (GMT-4);[10] it lasted through 14 March, when power was restored to much of the country.[11][12] It was the largest power outage in the country's history,[13] and affected the electricity sector in Venezuela in most of its 23 states,[10][14] as well as Roraima border state of Brazil,[15][16] causing serious problems in hospitals and clinics, industry, transport and in water service.[17] At least 43 deaths resulted.[18] On 12 March, power returned to some parts of the country, but Caracas remained only partially powered and western regions near the border with Colombia remained dark.[19] Power outages persisted in some areas for many days after 14 March.[20]

Between 14 and 16 of Venezuela's 23 states were again without power from 25 March[21] to 28 March;[22] at least four people died as a result of the three-day lack of power.[23] Another blackout started in the evening of 29 March,[24] followed by another 24 hours later.[25] During the month of March, Venezuela was without power for at least 10 days overall.[26]

The ongoing power outages have worsened the crisis in Venezuela and "suffering, cutting off water supplies and leaving hospitals and airports in the dark".[27] On 31 March, Maduro announced a 30-day plan to ration power.[28] Another major national blackout occurred on 22 July.[29]

History edit

Most of Venezuela's power comes from one of the largest hydroelectric dams in the world, Guri Dam in Bolívar State, Venezuela on the Caroni River; as of 2019, 70–80% of Venezuela's power comes from Guri.[13][30] Venezuela has a history of electrical blackouts dating at least to 2010;[31] Juan Nagel wrote in Foreign Policy in 2016 that the problems resulted from "massive government corruption [...] and the country's disastrous energy policies".[32] Univision also reported that the problems in the energy sector resulted from corruption and "lack of maintenance and investment".[31] A report from Transparency Venezuela said that maintenance was abandoned for twenty years beginning in 1998.[31] The aging infrastructure made the problems worse,[30] and critics were silenced; a union leader for state power workers was arrested in 2018 by the Bolivarian Intelligence Service for warning that a blackout was likely.[14]

The private company, Electricidad de Caracas was owned by the United States' AES Corporation until 2007; according to The Wall Street Journal, "Venezuela's power grid was once the envy of Latin America".[13] Then-President Hugo Chávez created the state-run Corpoelec by nationalizing the electric sector and expelling private industry in 2007;[31] hence, the state has been solely responsible for energy supply for over ten years.[32] Univision says Chávez "admitted failures (...) such as the 'insufficient' availability of the thermoelectric generation plant and the limitations of the national electric power transmission network and distribution systems";[31] he signed a decree in 2010 declaring a "State of Emergency of the National Electric Service".[31] Chávez had Corpoelec speed up projects, and bypassing the process of public bidding for projects, he "authorized 'contracting by direct award'," which facilitated corruption.[31]

In 2009, the Chávez administration declared a national electric emergency and invested $100 billion US dollars towards solving it.[33] The Chávez administration "distributed million-dollar contracts without bidding that enriched high officials of his government and the works were never built", according to Univision.[31] The Wall Street Journal stated that the government awarded electrical contracts to companies with little experience in the energy sector.[13] Billions of dollars were awarded in contracts for projects that were never completed, leading to international investigations of "high officials of the Chavez regime today persecuted for plundering the coffers of the Bolivarian Republic".[31] Critics say that one company, Derwick Associates, was given projects although they had no previous experience; Derwick denies any bribes were involved.[13][31] Of 40 energy projects approved between 2010 and 2014 analyzed by Transparency Venezuela, 17 are not completed as of March 2019, none are operating at capacity, and overcharging by billions of dollars was identified.[31]

 
Hugo Chávez in Brasilia in 2011

Further complicating the technical matters, the administration of Corpoelec was handed over to a Venezuelan National Guard Major General, Luis Motta Domínguez, who had admitted to a lack of experience in the energy industry.[31] Restarting an aging power grid requires specialists and equipment that may no longer be available in Venezuela,[30] as a result of a brain drain; thousands of workers have left the country,[34][35] or have left Corpoelec because of "meager wages and an atmosphere of paranoia fed by Mr. Maduro's ever-present secret police", according to experts cited by The New York Times.[5]

There were two major blackouts in 2013.[30] In 2016, Venezuela had a severe electricity crisis that caused blackouts, industry shutdowns, and the decision by then-President Nicolás Maduro to cut back on government employees' work hours.[32] Maduro's administration has put rationing in place several times, and changed the country's clocks to accommodate a daytime commute.[30] Nagel wrote in 2016, "... there are two main reasons for the crisis: excessive electricity consumption and insufficient production. And the root of both of these problems is bad governance: populism, poor planning, inflexible ideology, and overwhelming corruption."[32] And in 2017, there were more than 18,000 power outages nationwide.[34]

In 2017, the National Assembly investigated the $100 billion invested in the electrical system and determined that over $80 billion was embezzled, that more than 14 thermoelectric stations were not functioning, and that neither the electrical transmission nor the distribution system had adequate maintenance.[36]

Attempts to explain the ongoing power failures, despite the billions of dollars spent, have led to public scorn and ridicule on social media;[31] in 2018, Motta Dominguez said on Instagram, "Comrades! In some cases, faults in the electrical system are produced by animals such as: rats, mice, snakes, cats, squirrels, rabbits, turkey vultures, etc., that are looking for burrows, nests or hiding places, and are introduced into the system's equipment causing the failure."[31] In March 2019, two Venezuelan citizens—Jesús Ramón Veroes and Luis Alberto Chacín Haddad, who live in the US and have long associations with Corpoelec's Motta Domínguez—were charged in Florida District Court with money laundering, violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, and "misappropriation, theft and embezzlement of public funds by or for the benefit of a public official"; the complaint alleges millions of dollars were transferred from Corpoelec to their Florida bank accounts in 2016 and 2017.[37]

Causes edit

 
Guri Dam

Most of Venezuela's largest cities are powered from the San Geronimo B substation, connected to the hydroelectric power plant at the Gurí Dam "via one of the longest high-voltage lines in the world".[5] Sources cited by Corpoelec indicated a vegetation fire occurred on three lines of 765 kV between the dam and the Malena and San Gerónimo B substations.[3] The fire overheated the lines, triggering load rejection mechanisms that protect the lines connected to the dam.[3] According to the School of Electrical Engineering of the Central University of Venezuela, the momentary loss of power at the Gurí Dam caused the turbines to increase their speed, creating an overload on electrical systems.[38][4] The university further stated that the safety control systems in Gurí were activated to reduce the increased energy input, but the system became uncontrollable and forced operators to disconnect the generators in the dam.[38][4] When the generators were disconnected, the electrical frequency could not be regulated and overloaded power plants located in Caruachi and Macagua.[38][4] Because thermal power plants in Venezuela are not being operated due to the shortages of fuel provided by PDVSA, fluctuations in electrical frequencies exacerbated the power grid and contributed to continued blackouts.[4]

Satellite images by NASA show that the vegetation fire in the Guri started a day before the blackout.[39] Vegetation near power lines in Venezuela had not been pruned since 2018 – a particularly serious situation because of the dry season.[3] Engineers and analysts quoted by The Guardian say the cause is underfunding and mismanagement, including the deployment of soldiers to operate electrical substations instead of electricians.[14] A fault affected three large cables from the Simón Bolívar Hydroelectric Plant, which supply 80% of Venezuela's power. One cable lost power between the Malena and San Gerónimo B substations on the main network, which caused the other two to also lose power.[14] The engineer Miguel Lara, ex-manager of the Office of Planning of the Interconnected System, quoted by El Pitazo, declared the thermal plants did not start and that the rapid response generation plants did not work, so the electric service during the blackout was restored only in some areas.[3] The New York Times quoted José Aguilar, a Chicago-based Venezuelan power industry expert and consultant for reinsurance companies, who reviewed country-wide power levels during the blackout and said the government had attempted to restart Guri multiple times, leading to an explosion at a nearby substation.[5] Aguilar said these restart attempts had damaged "something else in the system, destabilizing the grid yet further (...) Obviously, they are hiding something from us."[5] The blackout occurred on Thursday 7 March; The New York Times said Corpoelec workers and a manager said no date had been set by 11 March for restart; that they were asked not to report to work that Monday; and the Times added, "[t]heir names have been withheld to protect them from government reprisals."[5]

Another backup substation, San Geronimo A, is connected to a smaller plant at Matagua, and was able to send a weaker, intermittent current during the blackout.[5] The government had built over a dozen backup plants powered by diesel or natural gas; none of them functioned during the outage.[40] The New York Times said the supply of fuel required to run thermal power plants has been affected by US sanctions.[40]

The administration of Nicolás Maduro blamed US sabotage for the outage[14] without providing any evidence, according to the BBC[41] and The New York Times.[5] Maduro alleged that the US had used advanced technology for a cyberattack on the grid.[41] Jorge Rodríguez, communications minister for the Maduro administration, pointed to Twitter posts by US Senator Marco Rubio, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and acting president Juan Guaidó, alleging that they demonstrated inside information about the blackout.[42]

Guaidó said Maduro's administration had failed to maintain the electrical grid.[14][43] Venezuelan energy experts cited by El Pitazo have rejected the theory that the blackout was caused by sabotage, since the area of the Gurí Dam is heavily guarded by members of the Armed Forces, where it operates a special command and the internal security of Corpolec.[3] These specialists have also pointed out that Gurí was constructed before the Internet existed, does not use the Internet, hence does not allow for hacking.[3] A risk management consultant cited by El Nacional dismissed the statement by government officials and assured that the design of the hydroelectric plant system does not allow "attacks" of that type. He said, "These systems can not be attacked remotely. They are closed control systems designed for generating turbines to work synchronously," and that would be "like hacking a refrigerator or a blender."[3]

The term "electromagnetic attack" often used, for a blackout of this magnitude, to refer an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generated by a high-altitude nuclear explosion, similar to those tested by the US in Starfish Prime or by Soviet Union's Project K.[44] Sharon Burke from New America, a non partisan think tank, consider that such an event would be noticeable by other nations.[44] David Weinstein, chief security officer at Claroty, a security company that specializes in protecting infrastructure, considers unlikely the use of electromagnetic bursts to knock out the Venezuelan electric grid and states that "the power fails easily in Venezuela anyway, so it's almost like a waste of the capability".[44]

Lisandro Cabello, secretary of the state of Zulia governorship from the PSUV party, said the explosions in electrical substations in that state were caused by kites.[45]

Effects edit

The most vulnerable sectors of society were affected, with power, water, food, transportation and medical shortages.[46] France 24 reported that the country lost US$200 million daily according to Carlos Larrazabal, the head of Fedecámaras; he said the biggest losses were in the food sector.[47] Torino Capital investment bank estimated that US$1 billion was lost from Venezuela's GDP as a result of the power outages.[48]

Food and water edit

With the blackout, already existing shortages of food and medicine were aggravated;[49] refrigerated food products were damaged,[50] and meat, fish and dairy retailers without refrigeration had to close.[49] With ongoing disruption in refrigeration, Fedecameras said that production of meat, milk and vegetables were cut in half.[47] One bakery said it had lost all bread dough for one day, which was equivalent in value to 56 times the monthly minimum wage.[40]

Due to the lack of electricity, the water distribution system also had shortages. José de Viana, an engineer and former president of Hidrocapital, the municipal water company in Caracas, said that the 20,000 liters per second of water that Caracas needs fell to 13,000 during the blackouts, and later completely stopped.[51] He said that 90% of the thermoelectric plants that work as a backup if power fails are not operational because of lack of maintenance, or they have been simply disconnected,[52] and that "the most important population centers in the country [had] zero water supply for more than four days. Not a single drop of new water has been entering Caracas since Thursday, 7 March".[53] According to The Washington Post, analysts said that two-thirds of Venezuela's population (20 million people) were without water, partially or completely, in the weeks after the blackouts.[52]

In Caracas, beginning 11 March, hundreds of people[54] swarmed the polluted Guaire River in the center of Caracas to fill plastic containers with contaminated water, or collected water from streams at El Ávila National Park.[51] Others tried to catch water from the city's sewer drains.[55] Hundreds of people lined up at the foot of El Ávila hill to collect water from its streams.[56] Long lines were reported in the state of Carabobo to buy water, ice and fuel,[57] while in the state of Lara people bathed in the sewers.[58]

The head of the infectious disease department at the University Hospital of Caracas, Maria Eugenia Landaeta said that, without access to clean water, the chance of people contracting bacterial infections increased, and that doctors had seen during the blackouts "surges in diarrhea, typhoid fever and hepatitis A",[52] while non-sterile water and lack of hygiene was contributing to postpartum infections.[52] The University Hospital goes months without dependable water or power supply, and depends on water tanks and power generators.[52]

Telecommunications and banking edit

An explosion occurred at an unidentified power station in the state of Bolívar on 9 March, causing additional, concurrent outages that disabled 96%[59] of Venezuela's telecommunications infrastructure.[60] With most of telecommunications unavailable, both access to news in Venezuelan and reports on the situation abroad were significantly reduced.[61][62]

Shortages of the Venezuelan bolívar have been aggravated by the blackout. During the first days of the blackout the use of payment cards was not possible, as electricity and internet were not available, and some banks were closed. This problem, with the scarcity of cash, pushed some shops to accept only foreign currency, mostly the US dollar.[63] The need to use hard currency frequently led to the US dollar becoming dominant for transactions whilst banking was unavailable, overriding fears of the Maduro government's loose currency controls theoretically banning foreign currency, which supposedly accelerated the process of the popular currency defaulting to US dollars. After the blackout ended, many shops and other transactions kept prices in dollars, with people publicly using and talking about the spending; about 30% of all transactions in Venezuela were being done in dollars at the time.[64]

Hospital conditions and deaths edit

As of 13 March, there have been at least 43 reported deaths.[18] At least 26 were as a direct result of a prolonged loss of electricity,[14] though doctor Julio Castro clarified that this was based on the records of 40 primary medical centers, and the number is certainly higher.[65] Withholding his name for fear of government reprisals, The New York Times cited a "top medical official" who said there were 47 deaths in the main hospital in Maracaibo, half of which he attributed to the blackout.[66]

The Coalition of Organizations for the Right to Health and Life (Codevida) announced that 15 patients on renal dialysis died because these services were unavailable.[65] El Pitazo reported that six deaths were registered in the hospital of Acarigua-Araure, in Portuguesa, two of which were direct results of blackout. The hospital was not able to work at full capacity because of fuel shortages.[67]

Several patients with gunshot wounds – who could have received treatment – had amputations instead, for concern of "fatal complications if the blackout continued".[66] Efecto Cocuyo reported that an 86-year-old man fell and died after fracturing his skull in Lara.[68] Patients were robbed on two floors of a hospital that had lighting only in the emergency room from a generator when an armed group gained access to the hospital.[66] With no light, pregnant women in another hospital had to be sent outside.[66]

The government denied any deaths caused by the blackout;[49] the health minister said that reports linking deaths to the blackout were false.[69]

Infrastructure and industry edit

The blackout caused the Caracas Metro to shut down and public transportation to come to a standstill;[69] the lack of transportation affected the ability of personnel to get to their jobs, for example, in the medical industry.[69]

Restarting a power grid requires technical expertise that may no longer be present in Venezuela, and requires planning to balance and "handle the power surges and fluctuations involved in bringing power back online".[30] Since the original outage, there have been ongoing electrical substation explosions, causing further outages, including one in southeastern Caracas,[70] and a chain of explosions at substations in Maracaibo.[71]

According to Conindustria, the industrial sector lost about $220 million during March due to the blackouts.[72]

The blackout damaged elements of petroleum delivery, operations were disrupted,[73] and some damaged installations cannot be brought back online quickly; Venezuela's long-term oil production capacity could be affected.[74] Ali Moshiri, who oversaw Chevron operations in Venezuela, said he had warned the government for years that the oil fields needed independent power supplies, but his advice had not been heeded; he said, "All of the oil field production is tied into the public grid and if the public grid goes down, those fields get shut in."[40] The International Energy Agency says that because of the economic situation in Venezuela, and problems with the electricity supply, the entire Venezuelan industry is at risk of collapsing.[75]

Venezuela was once one of the three top producers of OPEC crude oil;[76] ten years ago, it produced over 3 million barrels per day (BPD), and in February 2018, 2 million BPD.[47] Production "has been declining for years due to economic collapse"; in March, Venezuela lost another 150,000 barrels per day in production.[76] An oil expert told France 24 that production completely ceased at one point during the blackouts.[47] The lack of power caused most of Venezuela's oil rigs to be shut down, and for a short time, cut the country's production in half. Unnamed sources told Bloomberg that, because of the power outages, output had dipped as low as 600,000 BPD, although Bloomberg says that production averaged 890,000 BPD for the month of March,[77] and Venezuela told OPEC it produced 960,000 BPD.[78] Wills Rangel, a former director of PDVSA, said the Orinoco Belt has not yet recovered from the blackouts; cleaning or repairing pipes that clogged while the heating system that helps the heavy crude move through pipelines was down could take months. Four upgraders—"facilities that convert the extra-heavy oil to more commercial blends"—require power and have not resumed production as of 5 April 2019, as the power grid has not been stabilized.[77] By April, Venezuela's exports were steady at a million barrels daily, "partially due to inventory drains".[79]

Five days without power "wiped out what little was left of Venezuela's heavy industry" in steel, aluminum and iron, according to The New York Times.[48] Because of the blackout, equipment used to make aluminum at the state-run Venalum, a subsidiary of Corporación Venezolana de Guayana, was damaged and the entire industry shut down.[13] Venezuela's largest steelmaker SIDOR ceased operating permanently after the blackout. Its production had been gradually decreasing since the company was nationalized in 2008 by Hugo Chávez. A former director said that Chávez had "received it as a productive and solvent company; but management coming from the military world, unaware of 'steel manufacturing' activity, together with the 'absence of strategic planning and investments, led to a sustained fall in production'."[80][81] The Alcasa aluminum plant and at least three other iron smelters also shut down.[48] Many of the heavy industry plants had been operating at low capacity because of poor management, with laborers reporting to work because free meals were offered.[48]

Education edit

Classes in primary schools, high schools and universities were suspended.[82]

Looting edit

During the night of 9 March and the early morning of 10 March, there was looting at Avenida San Martín in Caracas; locals tried to drive away the looters. Later that night, tanks of the Bolivarian National Police (PNB) traveled through the area without stopping the attempted looting. At 1:30 in the morning, two tanks arrived in the area and fired tear gas bombs at the looters then remained to guard the area.[83] In the early hours, people were looting a supermarket in La Florida, mostly taking liquor and personal hygiene items. A worker at the store said that they found leftover candles, which were presumably used to find entrance to the building.[84] On 10 March, another group tried to loot the supermarket at the La Pirámide shopping center in Baruta Municipality. National Police officers arrested at least 50 people.[85]

According to Fedecámaras, in only two days, more than 350 stores were looted in the state of Zulia,[86] and The New York Times said 523 stores were looted during the week in Maracaibo.[66] Authorities either responded late or ignored the looting in many cases, and withdrew from most places except one area in the west of Maracaibo, where around 400 people tried to loot until soldiers of the Venezuelan National Guard (GNB) arrived.[86] Hundreds of buildings were looted in the city, not only because of a lack of electricity but also a lack of supply of gasoline and drinking water; 70% of the Delicias Norte shopping center was looted, 30 stores in Centro Sambil were looted, and the Curva de Molina sector was completely destroyed. At a bakery in the center of the city a group of people threw a tear gas bomb before looting.[87]

Businesses in Barcelona, Anzoátegui were looted on 11 March and 29 people were arrested.[88]

Power rationing edit

On 31 March, Maduro announced a 30-day plan to ration power.[28] The president of Venezuela's Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Association said the power grid was " barely generating between 5,500 and 6,000 megawatts, when it has the capacity to generate 34,000 megawatts".[28] Maduro's administration announced that the workday would be shortened to 2:00 pm, that schools would remain closed, and that access to water would be a priority.[28] On 5 April, Corpoelec published a power rationing schedule, indicating that Caracas and part of Miranda state would not be rationed, and rationing would be implemented in five three-hour blocks for at least 30 days.[89][90]

The governor Omar Prieto announced on 9 April that the electricity rationing in the Zulia state would last up to 12 hours per day.[91]

Investigation and arrests edit

The blackout came in the midst of the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis, that started when the National Assembly declared that Nicolás Maduro's 2018 reelection was invalid and the body declared its president, Juan Guaidó, to be acting president of the nation. Maduro's Prosecutor General Tarek William Saab announced an investigation of Guaidó for sabotage of the power grid,[92] alleging he was an "intellectual author" of the "attack".[41]

Maduro called on the colectivos, saying, "The time has come for active resistance".[93][94] US State Department special envoy to Venezuela Elliot Abrams labeled this a "breakdown in law and order", and said, "That's calling for armed gangs to take over the streets (...) Perhaps it is a sign of Maduro's lack of confidence in his own security forces."[95] The United States withdrew all embassy personnel from Venezuela.[96]

National Assembly deputy Juan Andrés Mejía announced that the legislature had communicated with and sought assistance from Brazil, Colombia, Germany, Spain, the United States and several Caribbean island countries, and asked that OLADE (Latin American Organization for Energy) send a commission to investigate the cause.[97] Maduro said he would ask Russia, China, Iran and Cuba for help in investigating the cyberattack on the power grid,[98] and that two people had been arrested in connection with the attack.[99]

Between the evening of 11 March and the morning of 12 March, Bolivarian Intelligence Service agents raided the Caracas residence of journalist Luis Carlos Díaz, arrested him, and detained him at El Helicoide,[100] accusing him of instigating the blackout.[101] He was released after a hearing, and was charged with "instigation to commit a crime", was obligated to appear before the courts every eight days, and was prohibited from leaving the country, making declarations to the media or participating in public demonstrations.[102]

Roberto Marrero, Guaidó's chief of staff, was arrested by SEBIN during a raid on his home in the early morning hours of 21 March.[103] He was accused of terrorism and involvement in the blackout.[104] During the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis, the US had repeatedly warned Maduro not to go after Guaidó; Haaretz reported that the arrest of Guaidó's number-two person was a test of the US.[103] A risk consultant for London's IHS Markit, Diego Moya-Ocampos, said to Bloomberg that "the regime is testing the international community and its repeated warnings against laying a hand on Maduro's rival [Guaidó] ... if they can't touch him, they'll go after those close to him."[105] Nicholas Watson of Teneo Intelligence told The Wall Street Journal that "Marrero's arrest looks like a desperate attempt to break Guaidó's momentum .. The weakness in the regime's position is visible in the fact that arresting Guaidó himself would be seen as a step too far."[106]

Sequels edit

Second edit

Two weeks after power was restored from the 7 March blackout, Venezuela was still enduring ongoing power outages; on 25 March, another widespread blackout occurred. The Guardian reported that half the country was affected, and other media sources said 14 to 16 of Venezuela's 23 states were without power.[21] The Caracas Metro shut down,[107] shops closed early to avoid looting,[108] private and government workers were sent home,[21] and 91% of telecommunications were down.[109] Oil exports in Puerto José were halted due to lack of electricity.[110]

The BBC reported that Information Minister Jorge Rodríguez "had gone on state TV earlier to repeat the now-familiar assertion that opposition sabotage rather than a lack of maintenance had caused the afternoon blackout, saying hackers had attacked computers at the country's main hydroelectric dam."[6] Maduro later claimed that the blackout was caused by a rifle, "probably by a sniper hired by the opposition",[111] causing ridicule from Venezuelans.[112] Guaidó said, "despite the persecution and intimidation, there are honest people in Corpoelec" who inform us about the cause of the outage, which he said was an electrical fault in the San Jerónimo – La Horqueta – La Arenosa line that caused an overload in the substations.[113]

Rodríguez stated that most of the service was reestablished in record time;[6] power was restored in the evening but went out again during the night.[6] As the blackout continued, businesses were closed for three days, and school and universities were cancelled.[114]

In the hospitals monitored by the group Physicians for Health (Medicos por la Salud), four patients died because of the blackout. Three were elderly women in Caracas and Maracay, who could not be moved in time to an emergency room because elevators were not working due to the power outage, and one was an elderly man who died in San Cristóbal. Of the hospitals that were monitored, 71% were without water, and 53% had power from generators.[23]

Most cities had recovered from the blackout by 28 March,[22] and oil exports in Puerto José were restarted.[115]

End of March–Early April edit

Intermittent service continued after the first two widespread blackouts.[116] Another blackout started in the evening of 29 March.[24] A fourth blackout occurred on 30 March, at the same time in the evening (7:10 pm local time) as the third, affecting at least 20 states.[25] Classes in schools and universities restarted on 3 April.[82]

On 9 April, power was again out in parts of Caracas and in more than 20 states of the country;[117] this blackout occurred even after a rationing plan was put in place and at places and times where and when the plan called for power to be on.[116] About 90% of the country's telecommunications infrastructure went offline.[118]

July edit

Another major national blackout occurred on the evening of 22 July.[29] Nineteen states were affected.[29] NetBlocks measurements, indicate that only 6% of the country telecommunications remained active.[29] Non-stop state TV transmissions were off the air.[119] Subway transportation was also affected on rush hour traffic.[119] Work and schools were suspended the following day.[119] Maduro's administration reiterated the "electromagnetic attack" allegations as the cause of the blackout.[29] This blackout happened on the eve of an expected public assembly by Juan Guaidó.[120] "They tried to hide the tragedy by rationing supplies across the country, but their failure is evident: they destroyed the system and they don't have answers," said Guaidó during the blackout.[29]

Power returned to Caracas the following day.[119] According to the new energy minister, Freddy Brito, power had returned to five of the states on 23 July.[119]

Reactions edit

The National Assembly declared a state of emergency as an answer to the nationwide blackout.[121]

The Lima Group held Maduro entirely responsible for the outage.[122] Declaring that the Group stands in solidarity with "the Venezuelan people [who] have been suffering for years", the Group issued a statement saying the "situation only confirms the existence and magnitude of the humanitarian crisis that the Maduro regime refuses to recognize."[122] The statement said, "Only a legitimate government that emerged from free and democratic elections can carry out the reconstruction of the institutions, infrastructure and economy of the country that Venezuelans need to recover their dignity, the exercise of civic freedoms and the respect of their human rights."[122]

China offered to help restore the electrical system.[123] A spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry said they hoped the cause could be found quickly; without further detail, he said that China had received reports that the power grid had gone down due to a hacking attack and that "China is willing to provide help and technical support to restore Venezuela's power grid."[123]

Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that Russia agrees with Maduro that Western sabotage caused the power outage in Venezuela. She alleged that "it was an attempt to remotely influence control systems at major electrical substations where Canadian-made equipment is installed".[124] President of Bolivia Evo Morales labeled the outage "a cowardly act of terror" and rejected what he called the continuous meddling of the US in Venezuela's affairs.[125] President of Cuba Miguel Díaz-Canel condemned the "aggression against Venezuela" and labeled the sabotage a "terrorist attack".[126]

US special envoy for Venezuela, Elliott Abrams, denied any US responsibility, saying, "This is a multiyear decline in Venezuela. The situation there, due to the mismanagement, the economic policies and the sheer corruption of this regime, are the cause of those problems."[40]

During the second blackout, on 26 March Guaidó said the "blackout shows that the dictator is incapable of finding a solution to the crisis".[113] He criticized that after government officials claimed that the cause of the blackout was a cyberattack, they changed the narrative to claim it was produced by "sabotage", stressing that the electric facilities are heavily militarized.[127] Following the fourth blackout, Guaidó said that he will enlist help from the Japanese government to address the blackouts, and that Japan's many electricity-related companies were prepared to invest in Venezuela to help improve the power situation.[128]

Chavista deputy Eduardo Labrador, representing the Maduro government PSUV party in Zulia state, asked in mid-March that Motta Domínguez, in office since 2015,[129] be dismissed as head of Corpoelec.[130] On 1 April, Motta Domínguez was fired and replaced by a 65-year-old electrical engineer, Igor Gavidia León.[131] In May, Gavidia León was replaced with engineer Freddy Brito.[132]

Protests edit

Guaidó "took to the streets" to question Maduro's governance during the first two days of the blackout. According to The New York Times, "Maduro did not address the nation and his public silence has fed the tension gripping Caracas".[40]

Protests against Maduro in Caracas and other cities were called for 9 March, and went on despite the closure of the Caracas Metro and the lack of social media. The rally headed by Guaidó, took place near the presidential palace in Miraflores; The Washington Post labeled the manifestation as "unusual" as it was held in a sector usually associated with Maduro supporters. Heavy police presence blocked the streets with anti-riot shields.[133]

During the second nationwide blackout, Guaidó summoned new protests that would precede Operation Freedom (Spanish: Operación Libertad), a decisive massive rally through Caracas.[134] According to Guaidó, the goal of the protests is to increase political pressure, but rehearsals are needed as the operation cannot be organized "from one day to the next".[134] After Maduro's government talked about a cybernetic and electromagnetic attack, and about a sniper, Guaidó asked what would be the next version.[135]

Thousands of Venezuelans participated in a rally on Saturday, 30 March, against the recurring blackouts.[136] Guaidó toured around Miranda state and Caracas giving several speeches.[137] A rival pro-Maduro march was held the same day to protest against "imperialism" and in "defense of liberty".[136][137] Anti-riot police used tear gas against several opposition groups in areas where the Maduro supporters were active.[137] Cacerolazos were reported in Caracas after blackouts resumed on Saturday night.[138]

The next day, protests against the lack of electricity and water occurred in Caracas and other cities. Some of the protests occurred close to the presidential palace.[139] Maduro called again on the colectivos, asking them "to defend the peace of every barrio, of every block".[140] Videos circulated on social media showing colectivos threatening protesters and shooting in the streets;[139] two protestors were shot.[140] On Sunday night, police fired at protesters after they set burning barricades.[141]

Public opinion edit

According to a March poll by Meganálisis, 84.3% of Venezuelans reject the electrical sabotage theory.[142] A poll by Hercon Consultores of 1,000 voters surveyed between 26 March and 4 April 2019 found similar – that 87.5% of Venezuelans reject the theory.[143]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The map also shows the world's largest gas flare (as of 2016) at Punta de Mata, in the upper right quadrant.[1][2]

References edit

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    and
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  138. ^ . El Nacional (in Spanish). 30 March 2019. Archived from the original on 31 March 2019. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
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  142. ^ "Meganálisis: "84,3% de venezolanos rechaza teoría de sabotaje eléctrico"". El Nacional (in Spanish). 2 April 2019. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  143. ^ "87,5 % de los venezolanos no cree los cuentos de Nicolás Maduro sobre tesis del "sabotaje eléctrico" (Encuesta Hercon)". La Patilla (in Spanish). 5 April 2019. Retrieved 5 April 2019.

External links edit

  • Vox photos
  •   Media related to 2019 Venezuela blackout at Wikimedia Commons

2019, venezuelan, blackouts, nationwide, recurring, electrical, blackouts, venezuela, began, march, 2019, experts, state, corpoelec, corporación, eléctrica, nacional, sources, attribute, electricity, shortages, lack, maintenance, lack, technical, expertise, co. Nationwide recurring electrical blackouts in Venezuela began in March 2019 Experts and state run Corpoelec Corporacion Electrica Nacional sources attribute the electricity shortages to lack of maintenance and to a lack of technical expertise in the country resulting from a brain drain 3 4 5 Nicolas Maduro s administration attributes them to sabotage 6 7 8 Since March various nationwide blackouts occurred in the country 9 A light map of Venezuela on the night of 7 March 2019 and the night of 8 March 2019 a The first widespread blackout began on 7 March 2019 at 4 56 pm local time GMT 4 10 it lasted through 14 March when power was restored to much of the country 11 12 It was the largest power outage in the country s history 13 and affected the electricity sector in Venezuela in most of its 23 states 10 14 as well as Roraima border state of Brazil 15 16 causing serious problems in hospitals and clinics industry transport and in water service 17 At least 43 deaths resulted 18 On 12 March power returned to some parts of the country but Caracas remained only partially powered and western regions near the border with Colombia remained dark 19 Power outages persisted in some areas for many days after 14 March 20 Between 14 and 16 of Venezuela s 23 states were again without power from 25 March 21 to 28 March 22 at least four people died as a result of the three day lack of power 23 Another blackout started in the evening of 29 March 24 followed by another 24 hours later 25 During the month of March Venezuela was without power for at least 10 days overall 26 The ongoing power outages have worsened the crisis in Venezuela and suffering cutting off water supplies and leaving hospitals and airports in the dark 27 On 31 March Maduro announced a 30 day plan to ration power 28 Another major national blackout occurred on 22 July 29 Contents 1 History 2 Causes 3 Effects 3 1 Food and water 3 2 Telecommunications and banking 3 3 Hospital conditions and deaths 3 4 Infrastructure and industry 3 5 Education 3 6 Looting 3 7 Power rationing 4 Investigation and arrests 5 Sequels 5 1 Second 5 2 End of March Early April 5 3 July 6 Reactions 6 1 Protests 6 2 Public opinion 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory editMost of Venezuela s power comes from one of the largest hydroelectric dams in the world Guri Dam in Bolivar State Venezuela on the Caroni River as of 2019 70 80 of Venezuela s power comes from Guri 13 30 Venezuela has a history of electrical blackouts dating at least to 2010 31 Juan Nagel wrote in Foreign Policy in 2016 that the problems resulted from massive government corruption and the country s disastrous energy policies 32 Univision also reported that the problems in the energy sector resulted from corruption and lack of maintenance and investment 31 A report from Transparency Venezuela said that maintenance was abandoned for twenty years beginning in 1998 31 The aging infrastructure made the problems worse 30 and critics were silenced a union leader for state power workers was arrested in 2018 by the Bolivarian Intelligence Service for warning that a blackout was likely 14 The private company Electricidad de Caracas was owned by the United States AES Corporation until 2007 according to The Wall Street Journal Venezuela s power grid was once the envy of Latin America 13 Then President Hugo Chavez created the state run Corpoelec by nationalizing the electric sector and expelling private industry in 2007 31 hence the state has been solely responsible for energy supply for over ten years 32 Univision says Chavez admitted failures such as the insufficient availability of the thermoelectric generation plant and the limitations of the national electric power transmission network and distribution systems 31 he signed a decree in 2010 declaring a State of Emergency of the National Electric Service 31 Chavez had Corpoelec speed up projects and bypassing the process of public bidding for projects he authorized contracting by direct award which facilitated corruption 31 In 2009 the Chavez administration declared a national electric emergency and invested 100 billion US dollars towards solving it 33 The Chavez administration distributed million dollar contracts without bidding that enriched high officials of his government and the works were never built according to Univision 31 The Wall Street Journal stated that the government awarded electrical contracts to companies with little experience in the energy sector 13 Billions of dollars were awarded in contracts for projects that were never completed leading to international investigations of high officials of the Chavez regime today persecuted for plundering the coffers of the Bolivarian Republic 31 Critics say that one company Derwick Associates was given projects although they had no previous experience Derwick denies any bribes were involved 13 31 Of 40 energy projects approved between 2010 and 2014 analyzed by Transparency Venezuela 17 are not completed as of March 2019 none are operating at capacity and overcharging by billions of dollars was identified 31 nbsp Hugo Chavez in Brasilia in 2011 Further complicating the technical matters the administration of Corpoelec was handed over to a Venezuelan National Guard Major General Luis Motta Dominguez who had admitted to a lack of experience in the energy industry 31 Restarting an aging power grid requires specialists and equipment that may no longer be available in Venezuela 30 as a result of a brain drain thousands of workers have left the country 34 35 or have left Corpoelec because of meager wages and an atmosphere of paranoia fed by Mr Maduro s ever present secret police according to experts cited by The New York Times 5 There were two major blackouts in 2013 30 In 2016 Venezuela had a severe electricity crisis that caused blackouts industry shutdowns and the decision by then President Nicolas Maduro to cut back on government employees work hours 32 Maduro s administration has put rationing in place several times and changed the country s clocks to accommodate a daytime commute 30 Nagel wrote in 2016 there are two main reasons for the crisis excessive electricity consumption and insufficient production And the root of both of these problems is bad governance populism poor planning inflexible ideology and overwhelming corruption 32 And in 2017 there were more than 18 000 power outages nationwide 34 In 2017 the National Assembly investigated the 100 billion invested in the electrical system and determined that over 80 billion was embezzled that more than 14 thermoelectric stations were not functioning and that neither the electrical transmission nor the distribution system had adequate maintenance 36 Attempts to explain the ongoing power failures despite the billions of dollars spent have led to public scorn and ridicule on social media 31 in 2018 Motta Dominguez said on Instagram Comrades In some cases faults in the electrical system are produced by animals such as rats mice snakes cats squirrels rabbits turkey vultures etc that are looking for burrows nests or hiding places and are introduced into the system s equipment causing the failure 31 In March 2019 two Venezuelan citizens Jesus Ramon Veroes and Luis Alberto Chacin Haddad who live in the US and have long associations with Corpoelec s Motta Dominguez were charged in Florida District Court with money laundering violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and misappropriation theft and embezzlement of public funds by or for the benefit of a public official the complaint alleges millions of dollars were transferred from Corpoelec to their Florida bank accounts in 2016 and 2017 37 Causes edit nbsp Guri Dam Most of Venezuela s largest cities are powered from the San Geronimo B substation connected to the hydroelectric power plant at the Guri Dam via one of the longest high voltage lines in the world 5 Sources cited by Corpoelec indicated a vegetation fire occurred on three lines of 765 kV between the dam and the Malena and San Geronimo B substations 3 The fire overheated the lines triggering load rejection mechanisms that protect the lines connected to the dam 3 According to the School of Electrical Engineering of the Central University of Venezuela the momentary loss of power at the Guri Dam caused the turbines to increase their speed creating an overload on electrical systems 38 4 The university further stated that the safety control systems in Guri were activated to reduce the increased energy input but the system became uncontrollable and forced operators to disconnect the generators in the dam 38 4 When the generators were disconnected the electrical frequency could not be regulated and overloaded power plants located in Caruachi and Macagua 38 4 Because thermal power plants in Venezuela are not being operated due to the shortages of fuel provided by PDVSA fluctuations in electrical frequencies exacerbated the power grid and contributed to continued blackouts 4 Satellite images by NASA show that the vegetation fire in the Guri started a day before the blackout 39 Vegetation near power lines in Venezuela had not been pruned since 2018 a particularly serious situation because of the dry season 3 Engineers and analysts quoted by The Guardian say the cause is underfunding and mismanagement including the deployment of soldiers to operate electrical substations instead of electricians 14 A fault affected three large cables from the Simon Bolivar Hydroelectric Plant which supply 80 of Venezuela s power One cable lost power between the Malena and San Geronimo B substations on the main network which caused the other two to also lose power 14 The engineer Miguel Lara ex manager of the Office of Planning of the Interconnected System quoted by El Pitazo declared the thermal plants did not start and that the rapid response generation plants did not work so the electric service during the blackout was restored only in some areas 3 The New York Times quoted Jose Aguilar a Chicago based Venezuelan power industry expert and consultant for reinsurance companies who reviewed country wide power levels during the blackout and said the government had attempted to restart Guri multiple times leading to an explosion at a nearby substation 5 Aguilar said these restart attempts had damaged something else in the system destabilizing the grid yet further Obviously they are hiding something from us 5 The blackout occurred on Thursday 7 March The New York Times said Corpoelec workers and a manager said no date had been set by 11 March for restart that they were asked not to report to work that Monday and the Times added t heir names have been withheld to protect them from government reprisals 5 Another backup substation San Geronimo A is connected to a smaller plant at Matagua and was able to send a weaker intermittent current during the blackout 5 The government had built over a dozen backup plants powered by diesel or natural gas none of them functioned during the outage 40 The New York Times said the supply of fuel required to run thermal power plants has been affected by US sanctions 40 The administration of Nicolas Maduro blamed US sabotage for the outage 14 without providing any evidence according to the BBC 41 and The New York Times 5 Maduro alleged that the US had used advanced technology for a cyberattack on the grid 41 Jorge Rodriguez communications minister for the Maduro administration pointed to Twitter posts by US Senator Marco Rubio Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and acting president Juan Guaido alleging that they demonstrated inside information about the blackout 42 Guaido said Maduro s administration had failed to maintain the electrical grid 14 43 Venezuelan energy experts cited by El Pitazo have rejected the theory that the blackout was caused by sabotage since the area of the Guri Dam is heavily guarded by members of the Armed Forces where it operates a special command and the internal security of Corpolec 3 These specialists have also pointed out that Guri was constructed before the Internet existed does not use the Internet hence does not allow for hacking 3 A risk management consultant cited by El Nacional dismissed the statement by government officials and assured that the design of the hydroelectric plant system does not allow attacks of that type He said These systems can not be attacked remotely They are closed control systems designed for generating turbines to work synchronously and that would be like hacking a refrigerator or a blender 3 The term electromagnetic attack often used for a blackout of this magnitude to refer an electromagnetic pulse EMP generated by a high altitude nuclear explosion similar to those tested by the US in Starfish Prime or by Soviet Union s Project K 44 Sharon Burke from New America a non partisan think tank consider that such an event would be noticeable by other nations 44 David Weinstein chief security officer at Claroty a security company that specializes in protecting infrastructure considers unlikely the use of electromagnetic bursts to knock out the Venezuelan electric grid and states that the power fails easily in Venezuela anyway so it s almost like a waste of the capability 44 Lisandro Cabello secretary of the state of Zulia governorship from the PSUV party said the explosions in electrical substations in that state were caused by kites 45 Effects editThe most vulnerable sectors of society were affected with power water food transportation and medical shortages 46 France 24 reported that the country lost US 200 million daily according to Carlos Larrazabal the head of Fedecamaras he said the biggest losses were in the food sector 47 Torino Capital investment bank estimated that US 1 billion was lost from Venezuela s GDP as a result of the power outages 48 Food and water edit With the blackout already existing shortages of food and medicine were aggravated 49 refrigerated food products were damaged 50 and meat fish and dairy retailers without refrigeration had to close 49 With ongoing disruption in refrigeration Fedecameras said that production of meat milk and vegetables were cut in half 47 One bakery said it had lost all bread dough for one day which was equivalent in value to 56 times the monthly minimum wage 40 Due to the lack of electricity the water distribution system also had shortages Jose de Viana an engineer and former president of Hidrocapital the municipal water company in Caracas said that the 20 000 liters per second of water that Caracas needs fell to 13 000 during the blackouts and later completely stopped 51 He said that 90 of the thermoelectric plants that work as a backup if power fails are not operational because of lack of maintenance or they have been simply disconnected 52 and that the most important population centers in the country had zero water supply for more than four days Not a single drop of new water has been entering Caracas since Thursday 7 March 53 According to The Washington Post analysts said that two thirds of Venezuela s population 20 million people were without water partially or completely in the weeks after the blackouts 52 In Caracas beginning 11 March hundreds of people 54 swarmed the polluted Guaire River in the center of Caracas to fill plastic containers with contaminated water or collected water from streams at El Avila National Park 51 Others tried to catch water from the city s sewer drains 55 Hundreds of people lined up at the foot of El Avila hill to collect water from its streams 56 Long lines were reported in the state of Carabobo to buy water ice and fuel 57 while in the state of Lara people bathed in the sewers 58 The head of the infectious disease department at the University Hospital of Caracas Maria Eugenia Landaeta said that without access to clean water the chance of people contracting bacterial infections increased and that doctors had seen during the blackouts surges in diarrhea typhoid fever and hepatitis A 52 while non sterile water and lack of hygiene was contributing to postpartum infections 52 The University Hospital goes months without dependable water or power supply and depends on water tanks and power generators 52 Telecommunications and banking edit An explosion occurred at an unidentified power station in the state of Bolivar on 9 March causing additional concurrent outages that disabled 96 59 of Venezuela s telecommunications infrastructure 60 With most of telecommunications unavailable both access to news in Venezuelan and reports on the situation abroad were significantly reduced 61 62 Shortages of the Venezuelan bolivar have been aggravated by the blackout During the first days of the blackout the use of payment cards was not possible as electricity and internet were not available and some banks were closed This problem with the scarcity of cash pushed some shops to accept only foreign currency mostly the US dollar 63 The need to use hard currency frequently led to the US dollar becoming dominant for transactions whilst banking was unavailable overriding fears of the Maduro government s loose currency controls theoretically banning foreign currency which supposedly accelerated the process of the popular currency defaulting to US dollars After the blackout ended many shops and other transactions kept prices in dollars with people publicly using and talking about the spending about 30 of all transactions in Venezuela were being done in dollars at the time 64 Hospital conditions and deaths edit As of 13 March there have been at least 43 reported deaths 18 At least 26 were as a direct result of a prolonged loss of electricity 14 though doctor Julio Castro clarified that this was based on the records of 40 primary medical centers and the number is certainly higher 65 Withholding his name for fear of government reprisals The New York Times cited a top medical official who said there were 47 deaths in the main hospital in Maracaibo half of which he attributed to the blackout 66 The Coalition of Organizations for the Right to Health and Life Codevida announced that 15 patients on renal dialysis died because these services were unavailable 65 El Pitazo reported that six deaths were registered in the hospital of Acarigua Araure in Portuguesa two of which were direct results of blackout The hospital was not able to work at full capacity because of fuel shortages 67 Several patients with gunshot wounds who could have received treatment had amputations instead for concern of fatal complications if the blackout continued 66 Efecto Cocuyo reported that an 86 year old man fell and died after fracturing his skull in Lara 68 Patients were robbed on two floors of a hospital that had lighting only in the emergency room from a generator when an armed group gained access to the hospital 66 With no light pregnant women in another hospital had to be sent outside 66 The government denied any deaths caused by the blackout 49 the health minister said that reports linking deaths to the blackout were false 69 Infrastructure and industry edit The blackout caused the Caracas Metro to shut down and public transportation to come to a standstill 69 the lack of transportation affected the ability of personnel to get to their jobs for example in the medical industry 69 Restarting a power grid requires technical expertise that may no longer be present in Venezuela and requires planning to balance and handle the power surges and fluctuations involved in bringing power back online 30 Since the original outage there have been ongoing electrical substation explosions causing further outages including one in southeastern Caracas 70 and a chain of explosions at substations in Maracaibo 71 According to Conindustria the industrial sector lost about 220 million during March due to the blackouts 72 The blackout damaged elements of petroleum delivery operations were disrupted 73 and some damaged installations cannot be brought back online quickly Venezuela s long term oil production capacity could be affected 74 Ali Moshiri who oversaw Chevron operations in Venezuela said he had warned the government for years that the oil fields needed independent power supplies but his advice had not been heeded he said All of the oil field production is tied into the public grid and if the public grid goes down those fields get shut in 40 The International Energy Agency says that because of the economic situation in Venezuela and problems with the electricity supply the entire Venezuelan industry is at risk of collapsing 75 Venezuela was once one of the three top producers of OPEC crude oil 76 ten years ago it produced over 3 million barrels per day BPD and in February 2018 2 million BPD 47 Production has been declining for years due to economic collapse in March Venezuela lost another 150 000 barrels per day in production 76 An oil expert told France 24 that production completely ceased at one point during the blackouts 47 The lack of power caused most of Venezuela s oil rigs to be shut down and for a short time cut the country s production in half Unnamed sources told Bloomberg that because of the power outages output had dipped as low as 600 000 BPD although Bloomberg says that production averaged 890 000 BPD for the month of March 77 and Venezuela told OPEC it produced 960 000 BPD 78 Wills Rangel a former director of PDVSA said the Orinoco Belt has not yet recovered from the blackouts cleaning or repairing pipes that clogged while the heating system that helps the heavy crude move through pipelines was down could take months Four upgraders facilities that convert the extra heavy oil to more commercial blends require power and have not resumed production as of 5 April 2019 as the power grid has not been stabilized 77 By April Venezuela s exports were steady at a million barrels daily partially due to inventory drains 79 Five days without power wiped out what little was left of Venezuela s heavy industry in steel aluminum and iron according to The New York Times 48 Because of the blackout equipment used to make aluminum at the state run Venalum a subsidiary of Corporacion Venezolana de Guayana was damaged and the entire industry shut down 13 Venezuela s largest steelmaker SIDOR ceased operating permanently after the blackout Its production had been gradually decreasing since the company was nationalized in 2008 by Hugo Chavez A former director said that Chavez had received it as a productive and solvent company but management coming from the military world unaware of steel manufacturing activity together with the absence of strategic planning and investments led to a sustained fall in production 80 81 The Alcasa aluminum plant and at least three other iron smelters also shut down 48 Many of the heavy industry plants had been operating at low capacity because of poor management with laborers reporting to work because free meals were offered 48 Education edit Classes in primary schools high schools and universities were suspended 82 Looting edit During the night of 9 March and the early morning of 10 March there was looting at Avenida San Martin in Caracas locals tried to drive away the looters Later that night tanks of the Bolivarian National Police PNB traveled through the area without stopping the attempted looting At 1 30 in the morning two tanks arrived in the area and fired tear gas bombs at the looters then remained to guard the area 83 In the early hours people were looting a supermarket in La Florida mostly taking liquor and personal hygiene items A worker at the store said that they found leftover candles which were presumably used to find entrance to the building 84 On 10 March another group tried to loot the supermarket at the La Piramide shopping center in Baruta Municipality National Police officers arrested at least 50 people 85 According to Fedecamaras in only two days more than 350 stores were looted in the state of Zulia 86 and The New York Times said 523 stores were looted during the week in Maracaibo 66 Authorities either responded late or ignored the looting in many cases and withdrew from most places except one area in the west of Maracaibo where around 400 people tried to loot until soldiers of the Venezuelan National Guard GNB arrived 86 Hundreds of buildings were looted in the city not only because of a lack of electricity but also a lack of supply of gasoline and drinking water 70 of the Delicias Norte shopping center was looted 30 stores in Centro Sambil were looted and the Curva de Molina sector was completely destroyed At a bakery in the center of the city a group of people threw a tear gas bomb before looting 87 Businesses in Barcelona Anzoategui were looted on 11 March and 29 people were arrested 88 Power rationing edit On 31 March Maduro announced a 30 day plan to ration power 28 The president of Venezuela s Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Association said the power grid was barely generating between 5 500 and 6 000 megawatts when it has the capacity to generate 34 000 megawatts 28 Maduro s administration announced that the workday would be shortened to 2 00 pm that schools would remain closed and that access to water would be a priority 28 On 5 April Corpoelec published a power rationing schedule indicating that Caracas and part of Miranda state would not be rationed and rationing would be implemented in five three hour blocks for at least 30 days 89 90 The governor Omar Prieto announced on 9 April that the electricity rationing in the Zulia state would last up to 12 hours per day 91 Investigation and arrests edit nbsp nbsp Juan Guaido and Nicolas Maduro The blackout came in the midst of the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis that started when the National Assembly declared that Nicolas Maduro s 2018 reelection was invalid and the body declared its president Juan Guaido to be acting president of the nation Maduro s Prosecutor General Tarek William Saab announced an investigation of Guaido for sabotage of the power grid 92 alleging he was an intellectual author of the attack 41 Maduro called on the colectivos saying The time has come for active resistance 93 94 US State Department special envoy to Venezuela Elliot Abrams labeled this a breakdown in law and order and said That s calling for armed gangs to take over the streets Perhaps it is a sign of Maduro s lack of confidence in his own security forces 95 The United States withdrew all embassy personnel from Venezuela 96 National Assembly deputy Juan Andres Mejia announced that the legislature had communicated with and sought assistance from Brazil Colombia Germany Spain the United States and several Caribbean island countries and asked that OLADE Latin American Organization for Energy send a commission to investigate the cause 97 Maduro said he would ask Russia China Iran and Cuba for help in investigating the cyberattack on the power grid 98 and that two people had been arrested in connection with the attack 99 Between the evening of 11 March and the morning of 12 March Bolivarian Intelligence Service agents raided the Caracas residence of journalist Luis Carlos Diaz arrested him and detained him at El Helicoide 100 accusing him of instigating the blackout 101 He was released after a hearing and was charged with instigation to commit a crime was obligated to appear before the courts every eight days and was prohibited from leaving the country making declarations to the media or participating in public demonstrations 102 Roberto Marrero Guaido s chief of staff was arrested by SEBIN during a raid on his home in the early morning hours of 21 March 103 He was accused of terrorism and involvement in the blackout 104 During the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis the US had repeatedly warned Maduro not to go after Guaido Haaretz reported that the arrest of Guaido s number two person was a test of the US 103 A risk consultant for London s IHS Markit Diego Moya Ocampos said to Bloomberg that the regime is testing the international community and its repeated warnings against laying a hand on Maduro s rival Guaido if they can t touch him they ll go after those close to him 105 Nicholas Watson of Teneo Intelligence told The Wall Street Journal that Marrero s arrest looks like a desperate attempt to break Guaido s momentum The weakness in the regime s position is visible in the fact that arresting Guaido himself would be seen as a step too far 106 Sequels editSecond edit Two weeks after power was restored from the 7 March blackout Venezuela was still enduring ongoing power outages on 25 March another widespread blackout occurred The Guardian reported that half the country was affected and other media sources said 14 to 16 of Venezuela s 23 states were without power 21 The Caracas Metro shut down 107 shops closed early to avoid looting 108 private and government workers were sent home 21 and 91 of telecommunications were down 109 Oil exports in Puerto Jose were halted due to lack of electricity 110 The BBC reported that Information Minister Jorge Rodriguez had gone on state TV earlier to repeat the now familiar assertion that opposition sabotage rather than a lack of maintenance had caused the afternoon blackout saying hackers had attacked computers at the country s main hydroelectric dam 6 Maduro later claimed that the blackout was caused by a rifle probably by a sniper hired by the opposition 111 causing ridicule from Venezuelans 112 Guaido said despite the persecution and intimidation there are honest people in Corpoelec who inform us about the cause of the outage which he said was an electrical fault in the San Jeronimo La Horqueta La Arenosa line that caused an overload in the substations 113 Rodriguez stated that most of the service was reestablished in record time 6 power was restored in the evening but went out again during the night 6 As the blackout continued businesses were closed for three days and school and universities were cancelled 114 In the hospitals monitored by the group Physicians for Health Medicos por la Salud four patients died because of the blackout Three were elderly women in Caracas and Maracay who could not be moved in time to an emergency room because elevators were not working due to the power outage and one was an elderly man who died in San Cristobal Of the hospitals that were monitored 71 were without water and 53 had power from generators 23 Most cities had recovered from the blackout by 28 March 22 and oil exports in Puerto Jose were restarted 115 End of March Early April edit Intermittent service continued after the first two widespread blackouts 116 Another blackout started in the evening of 29 March 24 A fourth blackout occurred on 30 March at the same time in the evening 7 10 pm local time as the third affecting at least 20 states 25 Classes in schools and universities restarted on 3 April 82 On 9 April power was again out in parts of Caracas and in more than 20 states of the country 117 this blackout occurred even after a rationing plan was put in place and at places and times where and when the plan called for power to be on 116 About 90 of the country s telecommunications infrastructure went offline 118 July edit Another major national blackout occurred on the evening of 22 July 29 Nineteen states were affected 29 NetBlocks measurements indicate that only 6 of the country telecommunications remained active 29 Non stop state TV transmissions were off the air 119 Subway transportation was also affected on rush hour traffic 119 Work and schools were suspended the following day 119 Maduro s administration reiterated the electromagnetic attack allegations as the cause of the blackout 29 This blackout happened on the eve of an expected public assembly by Juan Guaido 120 They tried to hide the tragedy by rationing supplies across the country but their failure is evident they destroyed the system and they don t have answers said Guaido during the blackout 29 Power returned to Caracas the following day 119 According to the new energy minister Freddy Brito power had returned to five of the states on 23 July 119 Reactions editThe National Assembly declared a state of emergency as an answer to the nationwide blackout 121 The Lima Group held Maduro entirely responsible for the outage 122 Declaring that the Group stands in solidarity with the Venezuelan people who have been suffering for years the Group issued a statement saying the situation only confirms the existence and magnitude of the humanitarian crisis that the Maduro regime refuses to recognize 122 The statement said Only a legitimate government that emerged from free and democratic elections can carry out the reconstruction of the institutions infrastructure and economy of the country that Venezuelans need to recover their dignity the exercise of civic freedoms and the respect of their human rights 122 China offered to help restore the electrical system 123 A spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry said they hoped the cause could be found quickly without further detail he said that China had received reports that the power grid had gone down due to a hacking attack and that China is willing to provide help and technical support to restore Venezuela s power grid 123 Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that Russia agrees with Maduro that Western sabotage caused the power outage in Venezuela She alleged that it was an attempt to remotely influence control systems at major electrical substations where Canadian made equipment is installed 124 President of Bolivia Evo Morales labeled the outage a cowardly act of terror and rejected what he called the continuous meddling of the US in Venezuela s affairs 125 President of Cuba Miguel Diaz Canel condemned the aggression against Venezuela and labeled the sabotage a terrorist attack 126 US special envoy for Venezuela Elliott Abrams denied any US responsibility saying This is a multiyear decline in Venezuela The situation there due to the mismanagement the economic policies and the sheer corruption of this regime are the cause of those problems 40 During the second blackout on 26 March Guaido said the blackout shows that the dictator is incapable of finding a solution to the crisis 113 He criticized that after government officials claimed that the cause of the blackout was a cyberattack they changed the narrative to claim it was produced by sabotage stressing that the electric facilities are heavily militarized 127 Following the fourth blackout Guaido said that he will enlist help from the Japanese government to address the blackouts and that Japan s many electricity related companies were prepared to invest in Venezuela to help improve the power situation 128 Chavista deputy Eduardo Labrador representing the Maduro government PSUV party in Zulia state asked in mid March that Motta Dominguez in office since 2015 129 be dismissed as head of Corpoelec 130 On 1 April Motta Dominguez was fired and replaced by a 65 year old electrical engineer Igor Gavidia Leon 131 In May Gavidia Leon was replaced with engineer Freddy Brito 132 Protests edit Main article 2019 Venezuelan protests Guaido took to the streets to question Maduro s governance during the first two days of the blackout According to The New York Times Maduro did not address the nation and his public silence has fed the tension gripping Caracas 40 Protests against Maduro in Caracas and other cities were called for 9 March and went on despite the closure of the Caracas Metro and the lack of social media The rally headed by Guaido took place near the presidential palace in Miraflores The Washington Post labeled the manifestation as unusual as it was held in a sector usually associated with Maduro supporters Heavy police presence blocked the streets with anti riot shields 133 During the second nationwide blackout Guaido summoned new protests that would precede Operation Freedom Spanish Operacion Libertad a decisive massive rally through Caracas 134 According to Guaido the goal of the protests is to increase political pressure but rehearsals are needed as the operation cannot be organized from one day to the next 134 After Maduro s government talked about a cybernetic and electromagnetic attack and about a sniper Guaido asked what would be the next version 135 Thousands of Venezuelans participated in a rally on Saturday 30 March against the recurring blackouts 136 Guaido toured around Miranda state and Caracas giving several speeches 137 A rival pro Maduro march was held the same day to protest against imperialism and in defense of liberty 136 137 Anti riot police used tear gas against several opposition groups in areas where the Maduro supporters were active 137 Cacerolazos were reported in Caracas after blackouts resumed on Saturday night 138 The next day protests against the lack of electricity and water occurred in Caracas and other cities Some of the protests occurred close to the presidential palace 139 Maduro called again on the colectivos asking them to defend the peace of every barrio of every block 140 Videos circulated on social media showing colectivos threatening protesters and shooting in the streets 139 two protestors were shot 140 On Sunday night police fired at protesters after they set burning barricades 141 Public opinion edit According to a March poll by Meganalisis 84 3 of Venezuelans reject the electrical sabotage theory 142 A poll by Hercon Consultores of 1 000 voters surveyed between 26 March and 4 April 2019 found similar that 87 5 of Venezuelans reject the theory 143 See also edit2019 Argentina Paraguay and Uruguay blackout Manhattan blackout of July 2019 List of major power outagesNotes edit The map also shows the world s largest gas flare as of 2016 at Punta de Mata in the upper right quadrant 1 2 References edit Nunez Christina 13 January 2016 The world is hemorrhaging methane and now we can see where National Geographic Archived from the original on 15 January 2016 Retrieved 18 March 2019 Kurmanaev Anatoly 23 October 2016 Venezuelan oil is largely staying in ground or going up in smoke The country s vast oil potential isn t being realized for lack of equipment commitment and capital Wall Street Journal Retrieved 18 March 2019 a b c d e f g h Angulo Nataly Batiz Cesar 10 March 2019 Por que ocurrio el apagon nacional que provoco el caos en Venezuela Los expertos explican Why did the national blackout that caused the chaos in Venezuela happen The experts explain Univision in Spanish Retrieved 17 March 2019 Especialistas venezolanos en el tema electrico explican que el corte masivo de electricidad se debio a la falta de mantenimiento desprofesionalizacion constante del sector en los ultimos anos del chavismo falta de inversion y la gran vulnerabilidad que representa depender de un solo embalse el de Guri ubicado en el sur del pais en el estado Bolivar and Desmontan version de ataque cibernetico Es como hackear una nevera Dismantling cyberattack version It s like hacking a fridge El Nacional in Spanish 9 March 2019 Retrieved 17 March 2019 Expertos aseguran que el sistema de El Guri se creo antes de que existiera Internet por lo que no depende de dicho tipo de conexiones para funcionar Brassesco Javier and Fernando Nunez Noda Expediente Las causas del apagon en Venezuela File The causes of the blackout in Venezuela Verifikado in Spanish Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2019 Univision recogio opiniones de expertos a b c d e Molina Guzman Julio 12 March 2019 Origen de la falla electrica en Venezuela Central University of Venezuela Retrieved 14 March 2019 a b c d e f g h No end in sight to Venezuela s blackout experts warn New York Times 11 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 Energy experts Venezuelan power sector contractors and current and former Corpoelec employees have dismissed accusations of sabotage saying the blackout was the result of years of underinvestment corruption and brain drain Restarting the turbines requires skilled operators who can synchronize the speed of rotation on as many as nine of Guri s operational turbines Experts said the most experienced operators had long left the company because of meager wages and an atmosphere of paranoia fed by Mr Maduro s ever present secret police a b c d Venezuela crisis Fresh power cuts black out Caracas BBC 26 March 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2019 Thousands join rival protests on streets of Venezuela as power cuts continue MSN 10 March 2019 Archived from the original on 18 March 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Conformaran una comision presidencial para investigar el ciberataque y mostrar la verdad Prensa MPP in Spanish 12 March 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Angulo Nataly Los cuatro apagones que oscurecen a Venezuela in Spanish El Pitazo Retrieved 23 July 2019 a b Rodriguez Rosas Ronny 9 March 2019 A Motta Dominguez se le cumplio el plazo y no cumplio Motta Dominguez s deadline was met and he did not comply Efecto Cocuyo in Spanish Archived from the original on 13 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Venezuela power returns after blackout but normal service may be a long way off The Guardian 14 March 2016 Retrieved 17 March 2019 Four dead hundreds detained after Venezuela blackout rights groups Reuters 14 March 2019 Retrieved 17 March 2019 a b c d e f Dube Ryan and Maolis Castro 8 March 2019 Venezuela Blackout Plunges Millions Into Darkness Maduro without evidence blames sabotage by local opponents and the U S for power outage Wall Street Journal Retrieved 10 March 2019 One company Derwick Associates formed by a number of well connected young businessmen with scant experience in the power business received about 1 8 billion in contracts from Venezuelan state companies to buy and install turbines paying a U S company about 1 billion to do the work Derwick officials said they paid no bribes to any Venezuelan officials and the prices charged by the company reflected the high costs of doing business in Venezuela a b c d e f g Jones Sam 13 March 2019 Venezuela blackout what caused it and what happens next The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Foggin Sophie 26 March 2019 Why Venezuela s power outage is also a Brazilian problem Latin America Reports Retrieved 17 June 2019 Blackout darkens much of Venezuela in latest taste of economic woes Buenos Aires Times 8 March 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2019 En el tercer dia de apagon en Venezuela reportan que murieron 17 pacientes por falta de dialisis On the third day of the blackout in Venezuela it is reported that 17 patients died due to lack of dialysis Infobae in Spanish 9 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 a b Arroyo Lorena 12 March 2019 Denuncian ONGs apagon deja al menos 43 pacientes muertos en Venezuela NGOs denounce blackout leaves at least 43 patients dead in Venezuela Univision Retrieved 13 March 2019 Venezuela blaming U S for six day blackout orders diplomats to leave Reuters 12 March 2019 Retrieved 12 March 2019 Servicio electrico sigue sin restituirse totalmente tras el apagon nacional El Nacional in Spanish 18 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 a b c Phillips Tom 25 March 2019 No more hope fresh blackout leaves half of Venezuela without power The Guardian Retrieved 25 March 2019 a b Sequera Vivian Cohen Luc 29 March 2019 Venezuela blocks Guaido from office as the opposition scoffs Reuters Retrieved 29 March 2019 a b Altuve Armando 29 March 2019 Medicos por la Salud contabiliza cuatro muertes por segundo apagon nacional Doctors for Health counts four deaths per second national blackout El Pitazo in Spanish Retrieved 29 March 2019 a b New round of power cuts hits major cities in Venezuela Al Jazeera 29 March 2019 Retrieved 30 March 2019 a b Nuevo apagon afecto a Venezuela este sabado New blackout affected Venezuela this Saturday El Nacional in Spanish 30 March 2019 Archived from the original on 28 February 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2019 Venezuela sufre el tercer apagon en solo tres semanas Telemundo 51 in Spanish 29 March 2019 Retrieved 30 March 2019 Pons Corina and Brian Ellsworth 29 March 2019 International Red Cross ready for Venezuela humanitarian aid operation Reuters Retrieved 30 March 2019 a b c d Bermudez Margioni 1 April 2019 Maduro announces 30 days of electricity rationing in Venezuela Yahoo AFP Retrieved 1 April 2019 a b c d e f Sanchez Fabiola Goodman Joshua 23 July 2019 Much of Venezuela in the dark again after massive blackout Associated Press Retrieved 23 July 2019 a b c d e f Newman Lily Hay 12 March 2019 Why it s so hard to restart Venezuela s power grid Wired Retrieved 13 March 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Penaloza Pedro Pablo 10 March 2019 Mas de una decada de corrupcion e improvisacion dejan a Venezuela a oscuras More than a decade of corruption and improvisation leave Venezuela in the dark Univision in Spanish Retrieved 14 March 2019 a b c d Nagel Juan Cristobal 1 April 2016 In Venezuela the Lights Are Going Out Foreign Policy Retrieved 10 March 2019 U S and Swiss authorities launched probes into Derwick Associates a Venezuelan firm that builds power plants for the government No criminal charges have yet been filed but the firm is being investigated for laundering money and paying bribes to the state owned oil giant PDVSA using international financial institutions Venezuelan investigative journalists and bloggers have been on Dewick s sic case finding more examples of bad behavior They claim that its contracts were overpriced and awarded without public tender and that the firm passed off used power plants as brand new Derwick denies all these allegations claiming that it is being subjected to a witch hunt Derwick is just one firm but the saga appears to confirm that much of what ails Venezuela s electricity sector has to do with massive government corruption It would be simplistic to say that corruption is the only problem however In addition to tackling corruption sorting out this mess for good would involve undoing the country s disastrous energy policies privatizing electricity generation and raising prices Vinogradoff Ludmila 8 March 2019 Un largo apagon de 20 horas deja en la oscuridad a toda Venezuela ABC in Spanish Retrieved 18 March 2019 a b Rendon Moises 14 March 2019 Venezuela s man made power outage Center for Strategic and International Studies Retrieved 14 March 2019 Sequera Vivian and Brian Ellsworth 8 March 2019 WrapUp Venezuela crippled by power blackout China warns over foreign meddling CNBN Archived from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2019 Grant Will 14 March 2019 Entrevista de Juan Guaido con la BBC Ninguno de los organismos de seguridad que el gobierno controla se ha atrevido a apresarme BBC Retrieved 18 March 2019 Los montos que recibieron de Corpoelec Jesus Ramon Veroes y Luis Alberto Chacin acusados por EEUU de corrupcion The amounts received by Jesus Ramon Veroes and Luis Alberto Chacin accused by the US of corruption from Corpoelec La Patilla in Spanish 19 March 2019 Retrieved 20 March 2019 a b c El origen de la falla que causo el mega apagon en Venezuela The origin of the fault that caused the mega blackout in Venezuela La Patilla in Spanish 13 March 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2019 Angulo Nataly 14 March 2019 Fotos de la NASA demuestran que incendios en el Guri comenzaron un dia antes del apagon nacional NASA photos show that Guri fires began a day before the national blackout El Pitazo in Spanish Retrieved 16 March 2019 a b c d e f Venezuela blackout in 2nd day threatens food supplies and patient lives New York Times 8 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 a b c Venezuela s Juan Guaido faces sabotage investigation BBC 12 March 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Jorge Rodriguez Guaido Pompeo y Rubio confesaron ser autores del ataque al sistema electrico Venezolana de Television in Spanish Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 9 March 2019 Retrieved 1 April 2019 Daniels Joe Parkin Torres Patricia Phillips Tom 10 March 2019 A city of shadows fear as Venezuela s crippling blackout enters day four The Guardian Retrieved 13 March 2019 a b c Bussewitz Cathy 27 July 2019 AP Explains How big a threat is an electromagnetic attack Associated Press Retrieved 27 July 2019 Segun el secretario de la gobernacion del Zulia explosiones en las subestaciones electricas son culpa de los papagayos According to the secretary of the governorship of Zulia explosions in electrical substations are the fault of the kites Alberto News in Spanish 18 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 permanent dead link Smith Scott 16 March 2019 Los mas vulnerables de Venezuela siguen a oscuras tras el apagon Jamas hemos vivido esta crisis The most vulnerable in Venezuela remain in the dark after the blackout We have never experienced this crisis InfoBae in Spanish Associated Press Retrieved 16 March 2019 a b c d Blackouts savage Venezuela s already tattered economy France 24 28 March 2019 Retrieved 7 April 2019 a b c d As Venezuelan economy unravels Maduro opponents hope downturn will topple him New York Times 30 March 2019 via ProQuest Also available online a b c Martin Alexander 11 March 2019 Race against time in blackout hit Venezuela to save food stocks France 24 Agence France Presse Retrieved 18 March 2019 Daniels Joe Parkin and Patricia Torres 12 March 2019 We call it survival Venezuelans improvise solutions as blackout continues The Guardian Retrieved 13 March 2019 a b Ellsworth Brian and Vivian Sequera 11 March 2019 Desperate Venezuelans swarm sewage drains in search of water Reuters Retrieved 9 April 2019 a b c d e Hernandez Arelis R and Mariana Zuniga 4 April 2019 Why are you crying Mami In Venezuela the search for water is a daily struggle Washington Post Retrieved 9 April 2019 Rojas Indira 12 March 2019 Jose Maria de Viana El Sistema Tuy en Caracas necesita 600 megavatios de potencia para funcionar de nuevo Jose Maria de Viana The Tuy System in Caracas needs 600 megawatts of power to function again Prodavinci in Spanish Retrieved 13 March 2019 Desesperados los venezolanos recogen agua del rio Guaire la cloaca de Caracas Desperate Venezuelans collect water from the Guaire River the sewer of Caracas El Comercio in Spanish 11 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 In pictures Seeking water amid power cut BBC 13 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Lares Martiz Valentin 11 March 2019 Venezolanos en medio de una busqueda desesperada por agua y comida Venezuelans in the midst of a desperate search for water and food El Tiempo in Spanish Retrieved 13 March 2019 Romero Tibisay 10 March 2019 Valencia sigue sin luz y con largas colas por agua y gasolina Valencia still without light and with long queues for water and gasoline El Estimulo in Spanish Retrieved 13 March 2019 Ciudadanos se banan en alcantarillas por falta de luz y agua en Lara Citizens bathe in sewers due to lack of light and water in Lara El Nacional in Spanish 10 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Second national power outage detected across Venezuela netblocks org 9 March 2019 Retrieved 12 March 2019 Torchia Christopher 9 March 2019 More blackouts hit Venezuela as opposition government rally AP News Retrieved 10 March 2019 Olen Tangen Jr 19 June 2019 Venezuelan journalists report on their own survival Deutsche Welle Retrieved 24 June 2019 El apagon tambien fue informativo Espacio Publico in Spanish 12 March 2019 Retrieved 24 June 2019 Armas Mayela and Maria Ramirez 13 March 2019 Y los bolivares monedas extranjeras son primera opcion en Venezuela durante emergencia And the bolivars foreign currencies are first option in Venezuela during emergency Reuters in Spanish Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 14 March 2019 Rosati Andrew 18 June 2019 Venezuela Is Now Awash in U S Dollars Bloomberg Retrieved 19 June 2019 a b Aumentan a 21 los muertos en los hospitales de Venezuela por el masivo apagon Dead in Venezuelan hospitals from the massive blackout increased to 21 Infobae 11 March 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2019 a b c d e Venezuela was crumbling A blackout tipped parts of it into anarchy New York Times 15 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 Moro Colmenarez Mariangel 9 March 2019 Seis personas fallecieron durante apagon en hospital de Acarigua Araure Six people died during blackout in Acarigua Araure hospital El Pitazo Retrieved 14 March 2019 Pineda Sleinan Julett 11 March 2019 Hombre de 86 anos murio por fractura de craneo tras caerse durante el mega apagon en Lara year old man died from skull fracture after falling during the mega blackout in Lara Efecto Cocuyo Archived from the original on 15 March 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2019 a b c Sheridan Mary Beth and Mariana Zuniga 11 March 2019 In Venezuela blackout paralyzed hospitals spoiled food The Washington Post p A 9 via ProQuest Pipoli Renzo 11 March 2019 Venezuela s Guaido declares emergency after 4 day blackout UPI Retrieved 15 March 2019 Angulo Nataly 15 March 2019 Se registro explosion en cadena de subestaciones en Maracaibo Chain of substation explosions in Maracaibo was recorded El Pitazo in Spanish Retrieved 15 March 2019 Pons Corina Armas Mayela 12 April 2019 Blackouts threaten death blow to Venezuela s industrial survivors Reuters Retrieved 12 April 2019 Meredith Sam 15 March 2019 Venezuela s electricity crisis could trigger serious disruption to the oil market IEA warns CNBC Retrieved 15 March 2019 The slippery slope for Venezuela s oil output gets steeper France24 15 March 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Isidore Chris 15 March 2019 Venezuela s oil industry at risk of collapse oil watchdog warns CNN Business Retrieved 15 March 2019 a b Lawler Alex 1 April 2019 OPEC oil output hits four year low on Saudi cuts Venezuela blackouts Reuters Retrieved 7 April 2019 a b Zerpa Fabiola 5 April 2019 Venezuela blackouts cut oil output by half in March Houston Chronicle Bloomberg Retrieved 7 April 2019 Lawler Alex 10 April 2019 Venezuela reports collapse in oil supply tightening global market OPEC Reuters Retrieved 10 April 2019 Parraga Marianna 2 May 2019 Venezuelan PDVSA s oil exports steady in April flow to Cuba continues Reuters Retrieved 3 May 2019 Leon Mariela 17 March 2019 Senalan que con el apagon se cierran las puertas de Sidor El Universal in Spanish Retrieved 21 March 2019 Baida Guilherme 19 March 2019 Venezuelan steelmaker Sidor shuts all operations after energy blackout S amp P Global Retrieved 21 March 2019 a b Venezuela classes restart after weeks of blackouts Reuters 3 April 2019 Retrieved 3 April 2019 Vecinos de San Martin en Caracas intentaron espantar a saqueadores en medio del apagon Neighbors of San Martin in Caracas tried to scare looters in the middle of the blackout Tal Cual Digital 10 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Saquearon supermercado de La Florida durante la madrugada de este sabado Supermarket in La Florida looted during the early hours of this Saturday El Nacional 10 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 PNB detuvo a decenas personas por saqueo en supermercado en Baruta PNB arrested dozens of people for looting Baruta supermarket El Nacional 10 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 a b Meza Jose Gregorio 12 March 2019 En 2 dias saquearon mas de 350 locales comerciales en el Zulia In 2 days more than 350 shops in Zulia ransacked El Nacional Retrieved 13 March 2019 Fuentes Lysaura 10 March 2019 Lanzaron lacrimogena y saquearon panaderia en el centro de Maracaibo Tear gas thrown and bakery ransacked in the center of Maracaibo El Cooperante Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Camacho Jose 11 March 2019 Saqueos y 29 detenidos dejaron las mas de 60 horas sin electricidad en Anzoategui The more than 60 hours without electricity in Anzoategui left ranackings and 29 detainees Cronica Uno Retrieved 13 March 2019 Corpoelec publico cronograma de racionamiento electrico donde se excluye a Caracas El Universal in Spanish 5 April 2019 Retrieved 5 April 2019 Este es el cronograma de racionamiento electrico El Nacional in Spanish 5 April 2019 Retrieved 5 April 2019 Nuevo plan de racionamiento en Zulia sera de 12 horas diarias El Nacional in Spanish 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Phillips Tom 12 March 2019 Guaido under investigation for sabotage of power grid The Guardian Retrieved 13 March 2019 Phillips Tom 12 March 2019 US pulls all staff from Venezuela as Maduro blames blackout on demonic Trump plot The Guardian Retrieved 13 March 2019 Sheridan Mary Beth and Mariana Zuniga 14 March 2019 Maduro s muscle Motorcycle gangs known as colectivos are the enforcers for Venezuela s authoritarian leader Sun Sentinel The Washington Post Retrieved 14 March 2019 Shesgreen Deirdre 14 March 2019 Power out water scarce looting Venezuela in crisis Will Trump administration react USA Today Retrieved 14 March 2019 Wroughton Lesley 14 March 2019 Pompeo says all U S diplomats have left Venezuela Reuters Retrieved 14 March 2019 Mejia Solicitamos apoyo internacional para superar la crisis electrica Mejia We request international support to overcome the electricity crisis El Nacional in Spanish 11 March 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Venezuelan government investigates Guaido for sabotage of power grid France 24 13 March 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Venezuela to ask Russia China UN to help investigate power sabotage MSN TASS 13 March 2019 Archived from the original on 18 March 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Detenido en Caracas el periodista hispanovenezolano Luis Carlos Diaz Spanish Venezuelan journalist Luis Carlos Diaz detained in Caracas Europa Press in Spanish 12 March 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2019 Lafuente Javier 12 March 2019 Detenido un periodista hispanovenezolano critico con Maduro acusado de instigar un supuesto sabotaje a la red electrica A Spanish Venezuelan journalist critical of Maduro is arrested accused of instigating an alleged sabotage to the electricity grid El Pais in Spanish ISSN 1134 6582 Retrieved 14 March 2019 Liberan al periodista hispanovenezolano Luis Carlos Diaz aunque queda mudo en el pais The Spanish Venezuelan journalist Luis Carlos Diaz is released although he remains speechless in the country El Mundo in Spanish 13 March 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2019 a b Venezuela detains top aide to Guaido in test of Trump s red line Haaretz Reuters 21 March 2019 Retrieved 21 March 2019 Garcia Jacobo 21 March 2019 La policia venezolana detiene de madrugada al jefe de Gabinete de Guaido Venezuelan police arrest the head of the Guaido Cabinet at dawn El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 21 March 2019 Rosati Andrew and Patricia Laya 21 March 2019 Venezuela police detain Guaido s chief of staff after raid Bloomberg via ProQuest Also available online with a subscription Vyas Kejal 21 March 2019 Venezuela intelligence police detain top opposition aide Arrest threatens to raise tensions and provoke U S punitive measures Wall Street Journal via ProQuest Blackouts again hit much of Venezuela Local 10 Associated Press 25 March 2019 Archived from the original on 25 March 2019 Retrieved 25 March 2019 Valderrama Shaylim 25 March 2019 Second blackout in a month hits Venezuela cutting power to Caracas Reuters Retrieved 25 March 2019 New nationwide power outage detected across Venezuela NetBlocks 25 March 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2019 Activity halted at Venezuela s main oil port after blackout Reuters in Spanish 26 March 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2019 Presidente Maduro Ataque terrorista contra el SEN fue realizado por un francotirador Venezolana de Television 27 March 2019 Retrieved 30 March 2019 Los mejores memes que dejo la explicacion de Maduro sobre el apagon in Spanish El Nacional 27 March 2019 Retrieved 30 March 2019 a b Torres Andrea 26 March 2019 Guaido aseguro que el Gobierno es incapaz de mantener la electricidad y poner fin a la crisis Guaido said that the government is incapable of maintaining electricity and ending the crisis El Universal in Spanish Retrieved 26 March 2019 Buitrago Deisy and Shaylim Valderrama 30 March 2019 Venezuelans rally to protest chronic power outages Reuters Retrieved 30 March 2019 Deisy Buitrago Mircely Guanipa 29 March 2019 Venezuela s Jose oil export terminal restarts after blackout Reuters Retrieved 30 March 2019 a b Nuevo corte de electricidad deja a oscuras varias partes de Venezuela Reuters in Spanish 9 April 2019 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Otro apagon afecto a mas de 20 estados del pais El Nacional in Spanish 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Venezuela largely offline following new nationwide power outage 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 a b c d e Smith Scott 23 July 2019 Venezuela s lights coming back to life following outage Associated Press Retrieved 23 July 2019 Daniels Joe Parkin 23 July 2019 Venezuela widespread blackouts could be new normal experts warn The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 24 July 2019 La Asamblea Nacional de Venezuela aprueba declaracion de estado de alarma in Spanish CNN 11 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 a b c Grupo de Lima responsabiliza exclusivamente a Maduro del colapso del sistema electrico Lima Group blames Maduro exclusively for the collapse of the electrical system Sumarium 10 March 2019 Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 13 March 2019 a b China offer help to Venezuela to restore power Reuters 13 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Moscow believes Western sabotage caused Venezuelan blackout TASS 15 March 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Evo Morales califica de cobarde atentado terrorista el apagon en Venezuela Evo Morales describes the blackout in Venezuela as cowardly terrorist attack EFE in Spanish 9 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 Diaz Canel acusa a EEUU de hostigar a Venezuela y librar una guerra despiadada contra el pais Diaz Canel accuses the US of harassing Venezuela and waging a ruthless war against the country Europa Press in Spanish 13 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 Guaido sobre nuevo megaapagon Hablan de sabotaje pero tienen militarizadas instalaciones electricas in Spanish Efecto Cocuyo Archived from the original on 26 March 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2019 Guaido Will work with Japanese government NHK World 31 March 2019 Retrieved 1 April 2019 Venezuela Maduro destituye a Luis Motta Dominguez ministro de Energia Electrica El Comercio in Spanish 1 April 2019 Retrieved 2 April 2019 Hasta un diputado chavista exigio destitucion de Motta Dominguez Even a chavista deputy demanded the dismissal of Motta Dominguez La Patilla in Spanish 13 March 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Valderrama Shaylim Sequera Vivian 1 April 2019 Venezuela s Maduro replaces electricity minister amid blackouts Reuters Retrieved 2 April 2019 Maduro axes electricity minister amid ongoing Venezuela blackouts France 24 6 May 2019 Retrieved 23 July 2019 Sheridan Mary Beth 9 March 2019 Anti Maduro demonstrators jam Venezuelan streets despite blackouts The Washington Post Retrieved 14 March 2019 a b Phillips Tom Torres Patricia 27 March 2019 Venezuela opposition leader promises final push against Maduro amid new blackout The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 31 March 2019 Ayala Altuve Dayimar 29 March 2019 Juan Guaido tras el tercer apagon masivo hay que hacer un acto amplio de rechazo in Spanish El Pitazo Retrieved 30 March 2019 a b Deisy Buitrago Shaylim Valderrama 31 March 2019 Venezuelans rally to protest chronic power outages Reuters Retrieved 31 March 2019 a b c Jorge Rueda Christopher Torchia 31 March 2019 Venezuela s rival factions rally as power struggle persists The Washington Post Archived from the original on 31 March 2019 Retrieved 31 March 2019 Vecinos de Caracas tocan cacerolas este sabado luego de apagon El Nacional in Spanish 30 March 2019 Archived from the original on 31 March 2019 Retrieved 31 March 2019 a b Torchia Christopher 1 April 2019 Venezuela s Maduro announces power rationing amid outages The Washington Post Archived from the original on 1 April 2019 Retrieved 1 April 2019 a b Phillips Tom 1 April 2019 Venezuela Maduro calls on armed groups to keep order amid electricity rationing The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 1 April 2019 Valderrama Shaylim 1 April 2019 Venezuela s Guaido pledges more protests over power water shortages Reuters Retrieved 1 April 2019 Meganalisis 84 3 de venezolanos rechaza teoria de sabotaje electrico El Nacional in Spanish 2 April 2019 Retrieved 3 April 2019 87 5 de los venezolanos no cree los cuentos de Nicolas Maduro sobre tesis del sabotaje electrico Encuesta Hercon La Patilla in Spanish 5 April 2019 Retrieved 5 April 2019 External links editVox photos nbsp Media related to 2019 Venezuela blackout at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2019 Venezuelan blackouts amp oldid 1211944022, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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