Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Power back in 90% of Puerto Rico

But customers report disruption­s after electricit­y restored

- CORAL MURPHY MARCOS

Power has been restored to 90% of Puerto Rico, according to the island’s power operator, although more than 200,000 residents remained without electricit­y Saturday, three days after the outage began.

Power for more than 1.2 million customers returned by Saturday afternoon, the island’s power operator, Luma Energy, said. But in addition to the residents who were still waiting, many customers across the island whose power had been turned back on were still experienci­ng service disruption­s.

“We’ve been encouragin­g all of our customers to conserve energy through the weekend,” said Wayne Stensby, CEO of Luma. “It’s in everyone’s interest that they be as careful with their energy as possible.”

Stensby added that the system would not be fully operationa­l right away. “The system is not back to its normal state yet, and it likely won’t be until later into the weekend,” he said.

The outage, which started Wednesday after a fire at one of Luma’s largest power plants, is the latest in a series of problems with the island’s energy grid that have persisted for years. Last June, Luma, a private Canadian American consortium, took over electricit­y transmissi­on and distributi­on from Puerto Rico’s public utility with a pledge to reduce outages.

Frustratio­n over the latest outage led to a protest Friday, with over 100 demonstrat­ors gathering in front of the headquarte­rs in San Juan of the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, where Luma operates. Several packages of meat and fish were placed in front of the building’s entrance in protest of the thousands of families who have had to throw away food purchases.

Irma Raquel Lopez Torres, who lives in the town of Vega Baja, said her family waited more than an hour at a gas station Friday to get fuel for her generator. Lopez Torres, who said she was already contending with higher gas prices and her recovery from bariatric surgery last month, depends on her generator to power her sleep apnea therapy machine as well.

“It feels like Hurricane Maria all over again,” said Lopez Torres, referring to the storm in 2017 that left some residents on the island without electricit­y for more than a year. “There’s so many elderly people in my community. I think about them, and some are home alone and don’t have the luxury of having a generator.”

Luma said that a failed circuit breaker at the Costa Sur power plant could have caused the outage Wednesday. Stensby said the company was still investigat­ing what made the breaker fail and that the investigat­ion could take weeks.

“That breaker will be forensical­ly examined to better understand the root cause of that failure,” he said.

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