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Cuba Dispatch
18MAY

Refinery restart cuts grid deficit to 1,395 MW

4 min read
19:15UTC

Camilo Cienfuegos came back online on Friday 17 April after roughly four months down, processing the Anatoly Kolodkin crude into 337-367 MW of restored evening capacity by 26 April.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The 337-367 MW grid improvement was bought by Russian crude the administration's sanctions architecture nominally forbids.

UNE, Cuba's state grid operator (Unión Eléctrica Nacional), forecast a peak deficit of 1,365 to 1,395 MW for Sunday 26 April 2026 against demand of 3,100 MW. The shortfall sits 337 to 367 MW below the 1,732 MW deficit recorded on 15 April . The Camilo Cienfuegos refinery in Cienfuegos province restarted on Friday 17 April after roughly four months offline, routing the Anatoly Kolodkin crude delivered on 31 March into the grid. Energy Minister Vicente de la O Levy said publicly that "with just this ship, we only have fuel until the end of April".

The arithmetic of Cuban resupply has tightened to a single dependency. The thermal fleet needs roughly eight fuel cargoes a month at design tempo; between December 2025 and April 2026 it received one, meeting roughly 13 per cent of stated need. The PDVSA Cuba carve-out from 18 March walled off Venezuelan crude from the state oil entity, leaving Russian Sovcomflot deliveries as the island's last active supply line. The next cargo is the Universal, the Sovcomflot tanker expected at Matanzas on Wednesday 29 April under the cover of OFAC General Licence 134B.

Without that wind-down licence, every port operator, insurer and payment intermediary handling the Universal would face secondary-tariff exposure under EO 14380 . Treasury chose the operational track instead, narrowing its own architecture to keep the supply chain legal in May.

Camilo Cienfuegos was down for four months because Cuba had no crude to refine; its return depends on the Universal arriving on time and discharging. Renewable photovoltaic at 641 MW peak midday is now visible in UNE bulletins but cannot fill the evening hole that drove the 26 April deficit. De la O Levy's end-of-April fuel exhaustion signal makes the Universal a politically dated event with measurable consequences if it slips.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Cuba has an oil refinery in the province of Cienfuegos that turns crude oil into the heavy fuel oil that runs the power stations. That refinery had been shut down for about four months, which is one reason the blackouts had been so severe. On 17 April it restarted, using oil delivered by a Russian tanker at the end of March. The restart cut the amount of power the grid was short by about 20 per cent, which is why Havana got four days without blackouts. But Cuba's Energy Minister said the fuel from that delivery only lasts until the end of April. The next Russian tanker, the Universal, needs to arrive and unload around 29 April for the power to stay on.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Cuba's thermal generating fleet runs on residual fuel oil, a heavy refinery product that the Camilo Cienfuegos plant produces from crude feedstock. The island has no significant domestic crude reserves and no alternative thermal feedstock.

When the refinery is offline, the grid runs on whatever residual oil stockpiles remain from prior deliveries; those stockpiles exhausted in roughly 12 days after the previous Kolodkin cargo was processed. The grid deficit then becomes a direct function of the refinery restart date.

The four-month offline period reflects the structural condition that Cuba's Soviet-era refineries require periodic catalytic reformer regenerations and heat-exchanger cleaning cycles that need specialist equipment and chemicals unavailable under the sanctions environment.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The Camilo Cienfuegos refinery's sustained operation is wholly contingent on monthly Sovcomflot deliveries. A single delayed cargo, whether through US enforcement or logistics failure, shuts the refinery and restores the pre-17 April deficit within roughly 12 days.

    Short term · 0.85
  • Consequence

    Cuba's grid improvement is entirely attributable to the Russian crude route that EO 14380 nominally prohibits, making any genuine enforcement of EO 14380's secondary tariffs against Sovcomflot directly measurable in UNE deficit figures.

    Short term · 0.9
  • Risk

    The refinery's four-month maintenance backlog is not resolved by a single restart; structural catalyst and heat-exchanger deficits from the sanctions environment mean the plant operates below design efficiency and faces a higher unplanned-outage probability than normal.

    Medium term · 0.7
First Reported In

Update #2 · Two Cuba policies, one fortnight

Unión Eléctrica Nacional· 27 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
OCDH and dissident coalition (Otero Alcántara, Osorbo proxies)
OCDH and dissident coalition (Otero Alcántara, Osorbo proxies)
The Madrid-based OCDH coordinated the 13 May Brussels handover after the Cuban Supreme Popular Court rejected Otero Alcántara's early-release appeal in late April. The coalition's pivot to the EU restrictive-measures track follows procedural closure of the early-release vector before the 24 April US deadline lapsed.
European Union (Kajsa Ollongren)
European Union (Kajsa Ollongren)
Ollongren received the Acuerdo de Liberación in Brussels on 13 May from OCDH, Cuba Decide, Alianza de Cristianos de Cuba and Christian Solidarity Worldwide, a four-organisation petition for EU asset freezes on named Cuban officials and a victims' compensation fund. Brussels has been asked to open a restrictive-measures track parallel to the US personal-sanctions architecture.
Russia and Sovcomflot
Russia and Sovcomflot
Moscow stayed publicly silent on the Universal's status after the 16 May GL 134B expiry. The 270,000-barrel diesel cargo sits roughly 1,000 nautical miles from Cuba under an exclusion clause operative from loading; Sovcomflot carries indefinite legal exposure without US enforcement, and the announced replacement for the depleted Kolodkin is the very vessel that cannot lawfully unload.
Holy See (Pope Leo XIV)
Holy See (Pope Leo XIV)
Pope Leo XIV hosted Rubio for 45 minutes on 9 May with Cuba and Venezuela on the agenda, opening institutional space for US humanitarian aid routed through the Catholic Church rather than GAESA. His three pre-pontifical Cuba visits (2008, 2011, 2019) give the Holy See standing inside Cuban Catholic infrastructure that the State Department lacks.
Cuban government (Díaz-Canel, Rodríguez Parrilla, De la O Levy)
Cuban government (Díaz-Canel, Rodríguez Parrilla, De la O Levy)
Díaz-Canel's 13 May Facebook post offered dialogue "on equal terms" while ruling out political prisoners on the table; De la O Levy publicly conceded the island was "out of fuel" and corrected the Venezuelan cut-off date to November 2025. The framing casts US pressure as collective punishment without naming EO 14404 directly.
Trump administration and Florida Republican delegation (Bessent, Rubio, Giménez, Díaz-Balart, Salazar)
Trump administration and Florida Republican delegation (Bessent, Rubio, Giménez, Díaz-Balart, Salazar)
OFAC let GL 134B lapse on 16 May without a successor and added Lastres Morera as the first SDN under EO 14404 on 7 May. Giménez's 7 May press release endorsed the order as targeting the "regime's security apparatus"; Díaz-Balart and Salazar aligned. The Florida delegation moved from pressure to credit-taking on the personal-sanctions architecture.