Bloomberg published a satellite-imagery analysis of Cuba's electricity crisis in May 2026, drawing on NASA Black Marble nighttime-light data and Sentinel-2 imagery from the European Space Agency. The headline finding: Cuban nighttime light fell by up to 50 per cent across the island compared with baseline imagery, with Santiago de Cuba and Holguín worst affected. Matanzas accumulated 40 or more continuous blackout hours in early May.
Bloomberg's imagery matters because it sits independent of any Cuban government or Unión Eléctrica Nacional (UNE) source. Lowdown's prior coverage relied on UNE's own daily Nota Informativa for the structural picture; the satellite analysis confirms the trend through external instrumentation. The geographic distribution of the light loss tracks the regional disparity Lowdown noted in late April, when Havana absorbed four blackout-free days from 19 to 23 April while Holguín and Granma ran on 24-hour outages .
Nighttime-light satellite analysis has a recognised methodology in development and crisis assessment. NASA's Black Marble product, processed at the Goddard Space Flight Center, calibrates for moonlight, cloud cover and atmospheric variation; year-on-year comparison isolates structural change from short-term weather. Cuba's up-to-50-per-cent loss sits at the upper end of what the methodology has detected in modern non-conflict economies. Comparable readings include Venezuela's 2019 collapse and Lebanon's 2021 fuel crisis.
Bloomberg's chart converts the SEN's daily reporting into a single visual statement. For policy audiences in Washington, Brussels and the multilateral lender Community, the satellite image performs work that successive UNE notices cannot: it shows the structural state of the crisis at a glance, without requiring the audience to trust the source.
