Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Cuba Dispatch
17JUL

Felton trips, and the grid falls again

2 min read
14:00UTC

Felton unit 1 tripped at 11:05 on 14 July and took the national grid down with it, four days after a broken transmission line did the same job.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Cuba's grid collapsed a third time in July, this time from an eastern thermal block.

Felton unit 1, a thermal block in Holguín province in eastern Cuba, tripped at 11:05 on Tuesday 14 July and took the national system down with it, the second total collapse in four days and the third of the month, after Nuevitas on 6 July and the transmission fault of 10 July 1. UNE, the state grid operator, reported the generation deficit widening to 2,020 MW.

Felton holds one of the largest units in the Cuban fleet, and the hour of the trip is what makes it diagnostic. Demand at 11:05 in the morning sits well below the 20:30 evening maximum, when the system is stretched hardest. A grid carrying any reserve at all absorbs the loss of one block at that time of day without the public noticing. This one went dark instead.

Three total collapses in nine days, from three unrelated causes, set a cadence the island had not seen: a generating unit in Camagüey, a transmission line through the centre of the country, and now a thermal block in the east. The failures share no component. What they share is a system that can no longer absorb the loss of anything at all, which turns the next collapse into a question of timing rather than of cause.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Felton is one of Cuba's ageing thermal power plants, in Holguín province in the east. When its Unit 1 tripped (failed) at 11:05 on 14 July, it triggered the same kind of frequency swing that caused the 10 July collapse, and the whole national grid went down a second time within the same window. The deficit, the gap between how much power the island needs and how much it can actually generate, widened to 2,020 MW after this trip. That is roughly two-thirds of total national demand missing at once.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Fuel shortages force the grid operator to choose between running ageing thermal units continuously to cover peak demand, or halting them for maintenance and accepting a larger immediate deficit. Felton unit 1 tripped while carrying that continuous-running burden, with no rotation slack to spare.

The 10 July collapse left 11 of 16 thermal units offline for days afterward, meaning any single further unit, including Felton, was carrying a larger share of national load than normal when it failed on 14 July, making its loss more consequential than an equivalent trip would have been in a healthier system.

Escalation

The second total collapse within a week, following directly from a system already running with more than two-thirds of its thermal fleet offline, indicates the deficit is compounding rather than stabilising.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The widened 2,020 MW deficit after Felton's trip fed directly into UNE's own worsening 15 to 16 July bulletins, which recorded the deficit climbing further to 2,240 MW forecast.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Cuba blames the blockade for a 64% gas rise

CiberCuba, Infobae, 14ymedio and Diario Libre (cross-corroborated)· 17 Jul 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Felton trips, and the grid falls again
A third total collapse in July, from a third unrelated cause, marks a fleet that can no longer afford to lose any single component.
Different Perspectives
Human rights monitors (OCDH and Prisoners Defenders)
Human rights monitors (OCDH and Prisoners Defenders)
OCDH's 14 July dictamen named the specific offices responsible for holding Otero Alcántara past his sentence-expiry date; Prisoners Defenders counted 1,306 political prisoners, including 40 detained minors, on 9 July. Both oppose the Cuban government's account without endorsing Washington's sanctions instrument as a remedy.
US State Department
US State Department
Secretary Rubio said Cuba 'continues to ally itself with America's enemies' and framed the 13 July designations as deploying 'every tool at our disposal', now citing forced-labour export to Angola for the first time. These quotes rest on cached web snippets; state.gov was unreachable this run and could not be directly verified.
Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla called the 13 July designation package 'criminal and genocidal' and said 'Cuba is not a threat and US intelligence agencies know it'. State media frame the 16 July gas-price rise as a direct consequence of the intensifying blockade, though Havana has not disclosed its own container-import shift dated 3 July.
Russia
Russia
Moscow has sent Havana solidarity gestures, including birthday messages to Raúl Castro, but no tanker has reached Cuba since the Sovcomflot Universal diverted away in May, and none arrived this week either. Russia's backing remains rhetorical while the fuel gap CUPET's designation created stays unfilled from any state-to-state source.
Observatorio Cubano de Derechos Humanos (OCDH)
Observatorio Cubano de Derechos Humanos (OCDH)
The Madrid-based monitor published its half-year count of 1,949 repressive actions on 7 July, 299 in June, the highest monthly total it has logged in 2026, with independent journalists the most-targeted group. OCDH's figures moved the debate from sanctions cadence to security-state conduct in the same week Havana wanted the argument to stay on sanctions.
European Union (Stavros Lambrinidis)
European Union (Stavros Lambrinidis)
Lambrinidis told the UNGA the embargo harms ordinary Cubans, then criticised Havana's Ukraine-ceasefire vote and Russian military participation, announcing no new measures. The EU is managing two separate Cuba files, human rights and Cuba's Russia alignment, that have not yet merged into one policy with teeth.