Reuters: Venezuela shuts schools, businesses as blackout enters second day
CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela shut schools and suspended working hours on Friday after the capital Caracas and other major cities awoke without electricity for a second day due to a problem that struck the South American country’s main hydroelectric plant.
Much of Venezuela had no electricity since Thursday afternoon due to problems at the Guri dam plant, in a long blackout that affected the telephone network and the metro service in Caracas.
President Nicolas Maduro “has suspended classes and the working day today in order to facilitate the efforts for the recovery of electric service in the country,” wrote Vice President Delcy Rodríguez on her Twitter account.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: Internet and phone services have also been disrupted. And food-stocks being spoiled .... a frightful possibility. It is also an ominous sign that they have not restored power by now. A major transmission line can be quickly replaced and power restored. But if the problem is at this massive power plant .... I can only imagine what the worse case scenario must look like. Bottom line. If this continues for a few more days, the push against the Maduro government will intensify to a level not seen since the start of the protest movement against his regime. Even Maduro's supporters need electricity to survive.
More News On Venezuela's Massive Power Blackout Entering Its Second Day
Massive Venezuela power outage raises tensions amid crisis -- AP
Venezuela power cuts: Blackouts hit Caracas and spread -- BBC
Huge power outage leaves most of Venezuela in darkness -- CNN
Venezuela blackout: Government accuses opposition of 'sabotage' as country plunged into darkness by major electricity outage -- The Independent
Venezuela blackout: Maduro blames US for power outage -- Al Jazeera
Venezuela is in the dark after a nationwide power outage that Nicolás Maduro blamed on 'American imperialism' -- Business Insider
Venezuela blames sabotage & ‘US electricity war’ after major power outage -- RT
6 comments:
Poor commies cannot manage rainfall
https://tradingeconomics.com/venezuela/precipitation
For shame!
God Damn but it is obvious from the linked graph that you have a very peaked sinusoidal wave. You will have good years and bad years and central planners, who know how to drive a bus and organize demonstrations, shoot people, and very little else cannot do what Joseph did.
Oh well the U.S. will feel the Bern of this type of stupidity soon.
Bernie Sanders comes well recommended. His wife already bankrupted a college, so the Sanders really do know how to do what Maduro does.
Run things into the ground.
Real estate deal brokered by Bernie Sanders' wife sinks Vermont college
Well recommended
"A major transmission line can be quickly replaced and power restored. "
Not quite true. You need large transformers. Lead time on those is 18 months.
This has been pointed out by Newt Gingrich and Bill Moyers (a minor news celeb). Bill must have not fully partaken of the grape Kool Aid handed out by the DNC.
Democrats don't care. Nothing has been done.
I imagine a major transmission line can be quickly disrupted too.
Bill is a great interviewer albeit not liked by all. I watched him interview Howard Zinn shortly before Zinn's death.
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/12112009/watch2.html
Power lines usually have backups; if one leg of the circle goes out, another kicks in. Look up power distributions. Who know if Venezuela does this, my bet is plant equipment failure or sabotage, we'll find out soon (if we never do, its sabotage!).
We all know capitalism is wrong.
So when the maintenance chief of the largest damn said they needed capital reinvestment, Maduro sacked him.
So it was sabotage. Maduro sabotaged the economy and infrastructure by adhering to socialist dogma.
The truth prolly won't see the light of day. Lol
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