Accessibility links

Breaking News

Firefighters Subdue Deadly Blaze at Key Oil Facility in Cuba


Smoke rises from a deadly fire at a large oil storage facility in Matanzas, Cuba, August 9, 2022. The fire was sparked by lightning that struck one of the facility’s eight tanks on August 5.
Smoke rises from a deadly fire at a large oil storage facility in Matanzas, Cuba, August 9, 2022. The fire was sparked by lightning that struck one of the facility’s eight tanks on August 5.

A deadly fire that consumed at least half of a large oil storage facility in western Cuba and threatened to bring more power failures to the island's already fragile electricity system was largely controlled Wednesday after nearly five days, authorities said.

Flames that recently consumed the fourth tank in the eight-tank facility in Matanzas were almost quelled, although the third tank remained on fire and surrounded by smoke, officials said.

Colonel Daniel Chávez, second in command at Cuba's firefighting department, said the fire could keep burning for the next couple of days, but he did not expect it to spread further. He said the next step is to cool the area.

The blaze killed at least one person and injured 128 others, with 14 firefighters still reported missing and 20 people hospitalized. The fire also forced officials to evacuate more than 4,900 people and shut down a key thermoelectric plant after it ran out of water, raising concerns about a new round of blackouts in addition to the ones the government announced last week for Havana.

Arturo López-Levy, a politics and international relations professor at Holy Names University in California, said the fire will complicate an already difficult scenario in Cuba.

"I think any realistic forecast would point to more blackouts and more difficulty in carrying out the minimum economic activity in the country," he said.

Triple Tragedy

López-Levy also warned that it would be difficult "to lift up this country after this triple tragedy," referring to the U.S. sanctions, the pandemic and now the fire.

Some Cubans worry the blaze could lead to more planned power outages as the government grapples with a fuel shortage.

"That gives way to more justification of blackouts that are going to occur," said Pedro Pozo, a state worker.

'Danger is lurking'

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel praised the work by local firefighters and special teams sent by Mexico and Venezuela that employed boats, planes and helicopters to fight the blaze whose billowing, toxic smoke could be seen from the capital of Havana.

"[Tuesday] was a victory day, but we cannot be overconfident," the president tweeted Wednesday as he warned about a possible switch in the wind direction. "Danger is lurking."

The fire at the Matanzas Supertanker Base began Friday when lightning struck the key infrastructure, which operates an oil pipeline that receives Cuban crude oil that powers thermoelectric plants. It also serves as the unloading and transshipment center for imported crude oil, fuel oil and diesel.

The government has not provided an estimate of damages or said how much it has lost overall in key fuel supplies. The first tank was at 50% capacity and contained nearly 25,000 cubic meters of fuel. The second tank was full.

XS
SM
MD
LG