Massive Power Cut Leaves 48 mn South Americans in Dark; Trains Halt, Hospitals Run on Generators
Massive Power Cut Leaves 48 mn South Americans in Dark; Trains Halt, Hospitals Run on Generators
The scale of the outage was such that generators had been unable to compensate. By midday, power had returned to some sectors of Buenos Aires but the metro and trains were still halted. Public hospitals and private clinics were running on generators.

Buenos Aires​: Power was slowly being restored on Sunday after a massive outage blacked out Argentina and Uruguay, leaving around 48 million people without electricity, power companies said.

The cut, which happened just after 7:00 am (1000 GMT), also affected Paraguay, which reported short, localized losses of power.

"We have restored 40 percent of the power supply," said Juan Alberto Luchillo, a top official at Argentina's energy secretariat, just after 1:00 pm.

Argentinian power company Edesur, which has 2.5 million customers, wrote on Twitter that "the restoration of the electric power service to the grid is slowly beginning."

On a blog, Edesur said that 50,000 of its customers had power back.

"It will take several hours to reestablish the generation and distribution of electricity," said Edesur's spokeswoman Alejandra Martinez.

For its part, Uruguay's state power company UTE said it was "continuing to restore the service."

It said service was back in the northern part of the country above the Rio Negro river, as well as "part of the south coast and metropolitan area" around the capital Montevideo.

It was the first time a power cut had affected the entirety of both Argentina and Uruguay.

The outage was caused by "a collapse of the Argentine Interconnection System (SADI) which produced a massive power cut in the whole country and also affected Uruguay," Argentina's energy secretariat said in a statement quoted by local press.

"The causes are being investigated and have not yet been determined," it said on its Twitter account, adding that it would take "some hours" to restore power completely.

The scale of the outage was such that generators had been unable to compensate, it said.

By midday, power had returned to some sectors of Buenos Aires but the metro and trains were still halted.

Public hospitals and private clinics were running on generators.

"The only inconvenience is the elevators. We only have one working but all services are operating without problems," said an employee at the Fernandez Hospital.

Empty streets

Argentina has a population of more than 44 million while around 3.4 million people live in Uruguay.

Sources from the official energy agency of Paraguay, which borders Argentina to the northeast, told AP that cuts there had been "momentary."

A spokesperson for RGE, the biggest energy distributor in Brazil's southern Rio Grande do Sul state that borders both Argentina and Uruguay, said they had had no reports of cuts.

By mid-morning, streets were largely empty in a rainy Buenos Aires although some stores were open, operating with generators, while Montevideo was almost entirely without power, with only some traffic lights working.

It is Father's Day in Argentina and some restaurants were expecting many customers.

'Legs cut off'

The Tobago bar in the Boedo neighborhood of Buenos Aires had been fully booked for lunch.

"It had to happen today," said 60-year-old waiter Pedro Salinas.

"They've cut off our legs," he added, using a famous phrase uttered by football great Diego Maradona when he was kicked out of the 1994 World Cup after testing positive for drugs.

Some people shared messages on WhatsApp with advice on how to prepare for a length outage, such as collecting water.

In the interior plains region of Junin, residents stocke dup on drinking water sold in supermarkets.

"Fortunately we had two buckets on the patio that were filled with rain water. We've gone back to the Stone Age," Eduardo Gralatto from Junin told AFP.

"This happens because we rely a lot on computers."

Argentines are also going to the polls in several provinces on Sunday to elect governors, with some local media reporting voters cast ballots by candle light.

In Montevideo, some restaurants in the downtown area had power back by 11:00 am (1400 GMT).

More than an hour after the blackout, UTE said its system was being brought back "from zero."

Argentina and Uruguay have a common power grid centered on the bi-national Salto Grande dam, 450 kilometers (280 miles) north of Buenos Aires.

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