Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 23 March 2026
📘 Source: Club of Mozambique

Cuba had restored power to nearly half of ​the capital Havana by Sunday afternoon, officials said, less than 24 hours after the national grid collapsed for the second time in ‌a week amid a U.S. oil blockade that has dealt a major blow to the island’s already ailing energy infrastructure. The grid failed Saturday evening at 6:32 p.m.

(2232 GMT) after a major power plant in Nuevitas, in eastern Cuba’s Camaguey province, went offline, grid operator UNE said, causing a cascade effect that knocked out power to the nation’s ​approximately 10 million people. Nearly 500,000 homes and businesses in Havana – approximately 55% of the total – as well as 43 hospitals, were ​back online by Sunday afternoon, UNE said. The grid operator was also preparing to fire the country’s largest oil-fired power ⁠plant and expected it to be operating by day’s end, sharply boosting generation.

Life carried on as normal across most of Havana despite the ongoing ​blackouts, which have become a regular part of the daily routine in the capital even when the national grid is operational. “We’re stuck in the same ​rut,” said Havana resident Leoni Alberto, who said he was forced to cook with firewood several times a week due to the outages. “It’s absolute madness.

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There’s no other way around it.” Outlying provinces also reported a gradual restoration of power, though a dramatic shortage of diesel fuel means only a portion of the grid’s capacity is available for generation, meaning ​many areas will continue to see lengthy blackouts despite restoration efforts, officials said. Cellular service and internet remained spotty countrywide but had improved in many ​areas by afternoon. Havana resident Yordanis Lopez, like many in the waterfront capital, was still waiting for the lights to come back on at midday Sunday.

He said ‌the outage ⁠had left him in the dark in more ways than one. Cuba’s electrical grid has been teetering on the edge of collapse and unreliable for months, with hours, and sometimes day-long blackouts the norm. But Saturday’s grid failure marks the third major power outage this month, as a majority of the system went down on March ​4 when a key thermoelectric generating ​plant stopped suddenly. The power grid ⁠also went completely offline on Monday for unexplained reasons.

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by Club of Mozambique • March 23, 2026

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