More than a million customers in Puerto Rico remained without electricity on Thursday after a fire at a main power plant caused the biggest blackout so far this year across the US territory, forcing it to cancel classes and shutter government offices. The blackout also left some 160,000 customers without water and snarled traffic across the island of 3.2 million people, where the roar of generators and smell of diesel filled the air, per the AP. Those who couldn't afford generators and have medical conditions such as diabetes, which depends on refrigerated insulin, worried about how much longer they'd be without power.
Luma, the company that took over transmission and distribution from Puerto Rico's Electric Power Authority last year, said the exact cause of the interruption is unknown, but that the blackout could have been caused by a circuit-breaker failure Wednesday at the Costa Sur generation plant—one of four main plants on the island. "The system is being restored little by little," said Kevin Acevedo, a Luma vice president, adding that the company is trying to complete the work within 24 hours. "The people of Puerto Rico have to understand that it's a system with a lot of years."
As for the cause, "it's going to require an exhaustive investigation," Acevedo said, adding that the equipment whose failure sparked the fire had been properly maintained. Officials said at least three generation units were back online by Thursday, with crews working to restore more. Police officers were stationed at main intersections to help direct traffic on Thursday, while health officials checked in at hospitals to ensure generators were still running. The outage occurred two months before the Atlantic hurricane season starts, worrying many about the condition of Puerto Rico's electrical grid. "Yes, the system is fragile, no one is denying that, but we're prepared," Acevedo said.
story continues below
The outage further enraged Puerto Ricans already frustrated with an electricity system razed by Hurricane Maria in 2017. Emergency repairs were made at the time, but reconstruction efforts haven't yet started, and power company officials blame aging, ill-maintained infrastructure for the ongoing outages. A series of strong earthquakes that struck southern Puerto Rico, where the Costa Sur plant is located, also had damaged it. In June last year, a large fire at a substation in the capital of San Juan left hundreds of thousands without power. Another fire at a power plant in September 2016 sparked an island-wide blackout.
(More
Puerto Rico stories.)