All news

Electricity supplies to several Venezuelan regions cut again — paper

The cause of the power failure remains unknown

MEXICO, March 20. /TASS/. Electricity supplies have been cut to Venezuelan regions of Miranda, Vargas, Carabobo and Merida, as well as several districts in the capital Caracas on Tuesday, the Nacional newspaper said on its website.

The cause of the power failure remains unknown at the moment.

Officials of the country’s state power corporation Corpoelec said they are working to fix the problem.

Venezuela’s capital Caracas and 20 of the country’s 23 regions were left without electricity on March 7. The National Electric Company said the blackout had been caused by an accident at the Simon Bolivar Hydroelectric Plant, which Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro blamed on "US imperialism." However, the US Department of State denied any involvement.

The blackout triggered a wave of looting and robberies in the affected regions. In the state of Zulia alone, damages are estimated at more than $50 million.

Electricity began to be gradually restored across Venezuela on the night of March 8 but the situation worsened later following reports about an explosion at an electric substation located on the outskirts of the city of Ciudad Bolivar.

On March 11, the National Assembly (Venezuela’s unicameral parliament controlled by opponents of President Nicolas Maduro) declared the state of emergency in the country due to power outages at the request of opposition leader Juan Guaido.

On the following day, the country’s Communications Minister Jorge Rodriguez said that power supplies had been restored to most of Venezuela.