Energy was restored early Friday to almost all prospects in Puerto Rico after an island-wide blackout hit earlier this week, authorities mentioned.
Greater than 1.45 million prospects – or about 98.8% – had electrical energy lower than 48 hours after the outage hit, in line with Luma Vitality, which oversees the transmission and distribution of energy on the island.
“Although restoration is nearing completion, some customers may continue to experience temporary outages due to limited generation,” Luma mentioned.
Alejandro Granadillo / AP
The blackout hit Wednesday afternoon because the largely Catholic residents of the U.S. territory ready to have fun the Easter weekend. A transmission line failed, which then brought about turbines throughout the island to protectively shut down, officers mentioned. It additionally left greater than 400,000 prospects with out water on the time.
It was the most recent in a string of main outages on the island in recent times – the final main blackout occurred fewer than 5 months in the past on New Yr’s Eve.
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It wasn’t instantly clear what brought about the failure this time, though authorities are investigating whether or not a sequence of breakers failed or if overgrown vegetation is responsible.
“Preliminary analysis points to a failure in the protection system as the initial trigger, followed by the presence of vegetation on a transmission line between Cambalache and Manatí,” Luma mentioned Wednesday. “This sequence of failures triggered a chain of events that resulted in an island-wide outage.”
Gov. Jenniffer González mentioned she anticipated to obtain a preliminary report within the upcoming days.
Alejandro Granadillo / AP
Hundreds of Puerto Ricans fumed over the most recent blackout, with artist Unhealthy Bunny saying in Spanish on X, “when are we going to do something?” apparently referring to the outage.
Outages have been a continual drawback for Puerto Rico since Hurricane Maria destroyed an influence grid when it struck the island as a Class 4 storm in September 2017. Simply after crews mentioned they had been beginning to rebuild the grid in 2022, the island was hit exhausting by Hurricane Fiona.
The grid had already been deteriorating attributable to many years of an absence of upkeep and funding.