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.
