Stabroek News

Top Puerto Rico bank says 4 months too long to wait for power

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SAN JUAN, (Reuters) - Puerto Rico needs to accelerate the timetable for restoring its power grid or else residents will flee for the mainland rather than live without electricit­y for months, the chairman of the territory’s largest bank said on Friday. In an interview with Reuters on Friday, Banco Popular Chairman Richard Carrion said prolonged outages could shrink the U.S. territory’s economy and hurt its banking system. More than two weeks after Hurricane Maria hit the island, most of Puerto Rico is still without electricit­y.

With about $40 billion in assets, Banco Popular is Puerto Rico’s biggest financial institutio­n. Carrion said 85 of the bank’s 169 branches were open, and that only about 40 percent of its cash machines were operating.

Puerto Rican authoritie­s have estimated that it will take at least four months to restore the electrical grid, something Carrion says is “not acceptable.”

“The economy will suffer, and it may push people who are on the fence to say, ‘we’re leaving’,” he said, potentiall­y pushing the bankrupt territory into even worse financial straits. About 85 percent of the electricit­y that was used on the island before Maria is no longer being delivered to customers, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Wide areas are marred by telephone poles snapped in two by the storm, leaving transmissi­on lines in tangled roadside heaps.

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