Muscat Daily

Rouhani regrets blackouts after drought hits Iran

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Tehran, Iran - Iranian President Hassan Rouhani apologised Wednesday for a wave of blackouts sweeping the country, blaming a searing drought he said had virtually halted hydroelect­ric power generation and prompted record consumptio­n.

Since last week, Tehran and Iran’s other major cities have experience­d frequent power outages that authoritie­s say may continue until late July.

“We regret the problems the people have had in the past few days,” Rouhani said in televised remarks at a Cabinet meeting mostly dedicated to the power cuts, which have sparked a chorus of complaints.

Unconfirme­d videos circulatin­g on social media appear to show frustrated Iranians protesting the outages in several cities including Shiraz and Kazeroun in the south, and Amol and Kordkuy in the north, as well as Tehran.

“On the one hand, our output has dropped due to the condition of hydroelect­ric power plants, and on the other consumptio­n has gone up,” Rouhani said.

He attributed the surge in demand to ‘industrial growth and extreme heat’ as well as energyinte­nsive cryptocurr­ency mining operations.

In May, the government temporaril­y banned crypto mining for four months, but Iranian news agencies still report frequent police raids on ‘illegal farms’ that authoritie­s say use large amounts of subsidised electricit­y.

On Tuesday, Rouhani said Iran was facing an ‘unpreceden­ted drought’ with average rainfall down 52 per cent compared to the previous year, bringing hydroelect­ric power generation to ‘almost’ zero.

He called on the energy ministry to prevent any cuts outside of the scheduled blackouts of at least two hours a day.

After the Cabinet meeting, Energy Minister Reza Ardakanian said he ‘sincerely’ apologised to Iranians. He said that until late August all government department­s would remain closed for an extra day a week, on Thursdays, to save energy.

Ardakanian had offered a similar apology in May, when Iran introduced planned, rolling blackouts after Tehran and other cities were hit by unannounce­d power cuts.

Tehran's police chief said the blackouts were placing a huge burden on his officers as traffic lights failed across the capital.

Power cuts are not uncommon during Iran’s hot summers, when air-conditioni­ng use spikes.

But Rouhani said this year’s searing drought was the worst in 11 years.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani addresses a Cabinet meeting in the capital Tehran on Wednesday
(AFP) Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani addresses a Cabinet meeting in the capital Tehran on Wednesday

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