Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Cuba Dispatch
18MAY

Nuevitas failure blacks out all Cuba

2 min read
19:15UTC

Unión Eléctrica blamed a failed unit at the Nuevitas plant for Cuba's fourth total grid collapse of 2026; diaspora media reported cumulative outages of up to 87 hours in the worst-hit parts of Matanzas.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

A named-plant failure, not fuel shortage alone, now defines how Cuba's grid collapses.

Cuba's national electricity system failed completely around midday on Monday 6 July, cutting power to roughly 10 million people. Unión Eléctrica (UNE), the state grid operator, blamed the shutdown of Unit 6 at the Nuevitas thermoelectric plant in Camagüey. It was the fourth total collapse of the Sistema Eléctrico Nacional (SEN), Cuba's national grid, in 2026, a clear step up from the 21 June outage that darkened 64 per cent of the country .

Engineers restored power in stages over three days, closing the national circuit in the early hours of Wednesday 8 July. Recovery did not mean supply. UNE put the post-restoration peak deficit above 2,000 megawatts, with units at the Mariel, Antonio Guiteras, Cienfuegos, Diez de Octubre and Felton plants all still offline 1. Parts of Matanzas, already among the worst-hit provinces, had gone as long as 87 consecutive hours without power across the early-July outage that ran into Monday's collapse 2; Havana averaged about 15 hours a day dark even after reconnection.

The blackout has two causes, and Havana's diplomacy at the UN this week named only one. Fuel supply has been starved since Venezuela's crude cut-off in November 2025 and the June US designation of Cuba Petróleo (CUPET), the state oil company, with no tanker reaching the island since . The thermal fleet is failing on its own account too: the Nuevitas and Guiteras boilers that keep tripping are Soviet-era units run decades past their design life, and each cold restart under load shortens what is left of them. Sanctions withhold the fuel; the ageing machinery that would burn it breaks regardless.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Cuba's electricity comes mostly from a handful of large power stations built decades ago with Soviet help. On 6 July 2026, one generating unit at the Nuevitas plant broke down, and because the whole island's power stations are wired together as a single network, that one failure knocked out electricity across the entire island, well beyond Nuevitas itself. Engineers had to restart the system in stages over three days, plant by plant, because switching everything back on at once can cause another crash. Even after power came back, the country still had over 2,000 megawatts less electricity than it needs, and some areas, like Matanzas province, went without power for up to 87 hours straight.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Nuevitas Unit 6 is part of a fleet of eight main thermoelectric plants built between 1972 and 1988 to Soviet specifications requiring a 180-day overhaul cycle that Cuba has not completed on schedule since the mid-2000s for lack of spare parts and hard currency.

Cuba Petróleo's status as the state's sole fuel-import channel means a single sanctions designation or tanker cancellation removes the margin every plant needs to cover for another unit's downtime, so one failure at Nuevitas has nationwide reach rather than a regional one.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    A persistent 2,000+ MW deficit after restoration means UNE will likely schedule rolling blackouts nationwide through the summer peak-demand months rather than achieving a genuine return to pre-collapse supply.

  • Risk

    A fifth total collapse before year-end is plausible given four have already occurred in 2026, each stressing the same undermaintained thermal fleet.

First Reported In

Update #10 · Cuba's dark UN week, a prisoner vanishes

CiberCuba / AP wire· 9 Jul 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
Different Perspectives
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.
United States (Mike Waltz / OFAC)
United States (Mike Waltz / OFAC)
Ambassador Mike Waltz held up photographs of named Cuban political prisoners, including Otero Alcántara, telling the delegation "this is not Havana", while OFAC issued no new Cuba designation between 1 and 9 July. Washington is running the prisoner-naming track and the sanctions track separately, and a re-charged Otero Alcántara would give the naming track a fresh case to press.
Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MINREX)
Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MINREX)
MINREX rebutted Mike Waltz's prisoner photographs at the UNGA debate, saying Cuba has nothing resembling the repression imagery Washington displayed, while giving no public account of Otero Alcántara's whereabouts. Havana's embargo case depends on external sanctions as the sole cause of harm, which a domestically caused grid failure and an unexplained disappearance both complicate.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Moscow and Beijing offered rhetorical solidarity but no relief. No Russian tanker has reached Cuba since the Sovcomflot Universal diverted on 26 May, and China has moved no substitute cargo, leaving Havana's fuel siege unbroken by its strategic partners.