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Cuba Dispatch
28MAY

Guiteras fails 9th time, boiler leak at 04:58

3 min read
08:42UTC

The Antonio Guiteras thermoelectric plant suffered its ninth 2026 outage at 04:58 on 14 May; plant director Román Pérez Castañeda said 180 days of capital maintenance are needed but cannot be scheduled.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Antonio Guiteras needs 180 days of capital maintenance Cuba cannot afford to grant; failures are compressing.

Antonio Guiteras, Cuba's single largest thermoelectric unit, failed at 04:58 local time on 14 May 2026 after a boiler leak. UNE confirmed the incident in its Nota Informativa. It is the plant's ninth outage of 2026, the second in nine days following the 5 May seventh failure , and the proximate trigger for the Sistema Eléctrico Nacional's 06:09 partial disconnection across the eastern provinces.

The plant sits at Matanzas on Cuba's north-central coast, and its capacity when running anchors the SEN's eastern transmission. Plant director Román Pérez Castañeda told Granma, the state newspaper, that 180 days of comprehensive maintenance are required, but "the country's situation prevents the shutdown". Antonio Guiteras has had no capital overhaul since 2010. Each restart returns the same boiler tubes to the same temperatures and pressures that failed nine times this year already.

Grid engineers track the inter-failure interval as the diagnostic figure for thermal plant deterioration. Between the 5 May outage and the 14 May outage, the gap was nine days. Earlier in 2026, intervals between failures ran multiple weeks. Compressing intervals are what engineers watch when judging whether a plant is recoverable through patch repairs or requires the full capital window the country cannot afford to grant. Pérez Castañeda's public framing has now placed that judgement on the public record.

UNE's parallel admission, in the 13 May Granma report, that over 600 circuits are in daily protection consuming more than 800 MW of available generation, points to Antonio Guiteras carrying load it can no longer reliably carry. The Mother's Day synchronisation deadline UNE technicians committed to on 5 May was met on 10 May; four days later the plant broke again.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The **Antonio Guiteras** thermoelectric plant in **Matanzas** is Cuba's largest single source of electricity. It burns heavy fuel oil to make steam, which spins a turbine, which feeds the national grid. The plant was built by the Soviet Union in 1985 and has run more or less continuously since then. On 14 May at 04:58, a tube inside one of its boilers leaked, forcing a shutdown. The plant's director told the Communist Party newspaper Granma that the plant needs about six months of full repair work, but the country cannot afford to lose its output for that long. So technicians will patch the leak and start the plant back up, knowing the next failure is roughly nine days away on current trend. **Pérez Castañeda** confirmed on 14 May that the plant will keep running because no replacement generation exists.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Guiteras runs on Russian Urals-grade crude with specific sulphur and viscosity tolerances its 1985-vintage Soviet boilers were designed for. The plant's three boiler units have been operated continuously since the **CMEA** collapse in 1991 with no comprehensive refit, only patch repairs. Boiler-tube creep is the dominant failure mode; the **04:58 14 May** leak is the ninth instance of the same fault class in 2026.

The structural cause is the absence of a swing-generator on the SEN. When **Felton** or **Mariel** unit 6 fails, **Cienfuegos** or **Nuevitas** can theoretically pick up the load. When Guiteras fails, no single plant can replace it, so it must be patched and restarted regardless of the maintenance state. Management is operating against a generation-capacity constraint, not a maintenance-budget one.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Next Antonio Guiteras forced outage probable by 23 May 2026 on the nine-day inter-failure trend; a catastrophic tube rupture rather than a leak is now the most likely failure mode.

    Short term · 0.7
  • Consequence

    Cuba's national reserve margin will sit below 5% for the remainder of May, meaning any second concurrent forced outage triggers automatic eastern microsystem disconnection.

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Precedent

    Plant management's public 180-day figure with simultaneous refusal to take the shutdown establishes a formal admission that the SEN cannot tolerate Guiteras leaving service, locking in the run-to-failure regime.

    Medium term · 0.8
First Reported In

Update #4 · Diesel adrift, grid splits, Rubio at Vatican

Unión Eléctrica Nacional· 18 May 2026
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