Electricity market havana

HAVANA TIMES – Between 2018 and 2022 the Cuban government appealed to "scheduled service interruptions" to cut domestic consumption by 10.6%. However, this saving wasn't enough to compensate the electricity generation deficit, which was the result of fuel shortages and the deterioration of old
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HAVANA TIMES – Between 2018 and 2022 the Cuban government appealed to "scheduled service interruptions" to cut domestic consumption by 10.6%. However, this saving wasn''t enough to compensate the electricity generation deficit, which was the result of fuel shortages and the deterioration of old power plants. For that reason, the state-led sector had to also shrink its demand by 19.9%, partially paralyzing production. The harshest cuts affected agriculture (which had 45.3% less energy), industry (31.9% less) and construction (19.4% less).

The current year was looking brighter with electricity supply growing 37%, according to an annuoncement from the minister of Energy of Mines Vicente La O Levy, that was up until longer blackouts began again in September.

In May 2023,the Government proved its "energy optimism" with two acts. The reinauguration of the Antillana de Acero electric steel mill and Deputy Prime Minister Alejandro Gil Fernandez''s announcement of an order from President Miguel Diaz-Canel: "prioritize agriculture as soon as we have a better fuel situation."

With electricity shortages in recent weeks, and only two-thirds of national demand being supplied, it seems unthinkable to get the steel mill working in the capital or to allocate resources to barely "guarantee harvests," as Gil Fernandez said during the Mesa Redonda TV show in which he announced the current electricity crisis.

The more than 220,000 tons of "liquid steel" the Antilla steel mill could produce per year would give an important push to construction and other industries. Steel just so happens to be one of the scarcest products in the country, and programs such as the local manufacture of building materials can''t replace it.

Investments in Antillana de Acero came from a Russian credit worth 95 million USD that has to be paid back with revenue from the steel work''s production. However, problems that stand in the way of it working at full capacity will force the Government to get this money by other means or most likely to negotiate late payments under unfavorable conditions.

Something similar is happening in the agricultural sector. Diverting fuel towards electricity generation has had a bearing on the failure to meet the latest cultivation and harvest plans. Likewise, plans for irrigation that use electricity are on standby. Both the lack of foreign currency to buy equipment as well as foreseeable problems with its use exist, even late in the night when domestic energy use drops.

Alarm bells about Cuba''s energy crisis began ringing when drastic measures were announced by the provincial governments of Villa Clara and Cienfuegos to reduce electricity consumption, to paralyze non-essential services, changing working hours, adjusting water pumping times and even disconnecting refrigeration and cold rooms when produce won''t be affected. These extreme measures reveal just how serious the electricity crisis is in Cuba.

The landscape has ended up becoming a vicious cycle. The island needs to increase industrial and agricultural production to reduce imports, but in order to do this, it needs a steady and cheap supply of electricity which it can''t guarantee, because it is spending the foreign currency it needs to do this on buying products it could be producing.

"In Cuba, the residential sector consumes 60% of electricity generated, compared to 42% that is the Caribbean average. Between 2000 and 2023, the residencial sector more than doubled its total consumption," economists Jorge Piñon and Ricardo Torres explain in an article published by the Cuba Capacity Building Project, from Columbia University in the US, in December 2022.

For a couple of years, the State''s "self-blackouts" were enough to prevent blackouts in homes. The situation changed in 2018, when problems importing fuel forced the return of residential blackouts, which have marked national everyday life ever since; sometimes, dramatically.

With the private sector''s energy consumption growing – it increased 33.8% between 2021 and 2022 – and the residential sector''s demand not being met, but also clearly growing, blackouts in the productive economy seem to have reached their limit. The only solution is to renovate Cuba''s electricity industry from top to bottom.

They would need an investment of up to 10 billion USD and five to ten years worth of work to do this, economists Jorge Piñon and Ricardo Torres calculate. Given the magnitude of the project, the island would only be able to do this with the investment of foreign capital, which would demand a shift in mindset and the legal system. "Within a decentralized economic system, the use of Public/Private Associations should be considered that will attract private and multilateral funding," they explain.

Their proposal focuses on its economic viability. Even if the island were to find a way to finance investments in electricity infrastructure, it would have the problem of dealing with the population''s low purchasing power, which forces them to subsidize 89% of residential customers. Growth of demand would mean increased expenditure without being able to recover it, like now. "Unfortunately, we don''t have the answer to the question "who''s going to pay?", the experts admit.

Under these circumstances, prospects for the Antillana de Acero aren''t looking too promising. Nor are they promising for other productive projects that require a great deal of energy. The foreseeable fate of all of them will probably be that of the Sagua La Grande Electrochemistry complex, an industry producing different types of chlorine and hydrogen products as well as other industrial and home cleaning products that was upgraded just before the pandemic and was decisive in tackling COVID-19.

After the pandemic, it also received the order to "tighten its belt", despite there being a foolproof market for productions of alcohol gel and caustic soda both in and outside Cuba. This happened in 2022 and in the first few months of 2023 – it could only resume operations in May. Today, there isn''t enough electricity for it to keep running. It''s as simple as that.

HAVANA TIMES – Breakdowns at power plants, delays in maintenance works and fuel shortages are making Cuba''s energy crisis a lot worse, with blackouts being the most visible expression, a problem with no short-term solution that are hitting families hard.

"When the electricity cuts out, you have to invent ways to cook, with coal or wood; or sleep poorly the whole night with heat and mosquitoes, to then get up the next day and get the children ready for school and go to work. A lot of people are on the brink of a nervous breakdown," Idalmis Ramirez told IPS via WhatsApp. She''s a mother of two young children and living in Cifuentes, in the central Villa Clara province, east of Havana.

In recent weeks, residents have taken to the streets in different neighborhoods, especially during the night, to show their unhappiness at constant blackouts, which are sometimes over 10 hours long in some places.

Blackouts have got worse during the scorching summer on this Caribbean island with 11.1 million residents, with temperatures over 35 degrees Celsius and where some citizens have taken vacations from work, are spending more time at home and demanding more electricity.

The electricity generation deficit has even resulted in blackouts during the day, for at least four hours, although the Cuban capital with 2.1 million residents, and many accumulated social problems, has been hit less than the other 14 provinces.

On Tuesday August 2nd, the Ministry of Labor and Social Security issued a series of measures that authorizes remote working, holidays, schedule adjustments, relocation and even suspended work, so as to reduce electricity consumption at state institutions.

In July, President Miguel Diaz-Canel made an appearance before the National Assembly of People''s Power, the local unicameral parliament, recognizing "the population''s understandable unease and insatisfaction," and asked for citizens "understanding".

About Electricity market havana

About Electricity market havana

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