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Caracas blackout suspension sees Hugo Chavez halt rolling blackouts in the capital amid power rationing, Guri Dam drought risks, after outages hit wrong sectors and traffic lights, prompting the electricity minister's resignation.
At a Glance
Chavez halted Caracas rolling blackouts to fix errors, review rationing, and stabilize Venezuela's electricity grid.
- Rolling blackouts up to four hours daily nationwide
- Suspension limited to Caracas pending process review
- Errors cut power to wrong sectors and stoplights
- Electricity Minister Angel Rodriguez resigned
- Drought at Guri Dam and weak thermoelectric output
President Hugo Chavez indefinitely suspended rolling blackouts in Venezuela's capital just a day after they began, and sacked his electricity minister saying he was responsible for mistakes in the way the rationing plan was applied.
Chavez's announcements were a significant strategic shift in his attempts to prevent a widespread power collapse in the coming months through rolling blackouts of up to four hours a day across the country.
"I've ordered the electrical outages to be suspended, only in Caracas," Chavez said on state television. "Because this government has to be capable of recognizing mistakes made and fixing them in time."
Chavez said that since the outages began in Caracas, authorities had cut power to the wrong sectors of the city. "I think in one area they repeated the outage a few hours later," he said.
He added that some stoplights were left without power.
He also alleged that saboteurs targeting the grid were complicating recovery efforts.
"Enough. I said if that's what is going on, there was an error there," Chavez said.
Chavez said he asked Electricity Minister Angel Rodriguez to resign and that "he has taken it like a soldier."
He made the announcement shortly before some parts of Caracas were set to begin four-hour power blackouts at midnight.
He said he ordered the chief of the city's state electric utility not to schedule any more blackouts until the process is reviewed. It was unclear how soon the government could attempt to restart the measures in Caracas.
Chavez earlier urged Venezuelans to accept the cutbacks and to save energy as he likened them to a national energy diet.
The government says rationing is necessary to prevent a widespread power collapse if the water levels behind Guri Dam — which supplies most of Venezuela's electricity — fall to critical lows in the coming months due to a severe drought, and has also imposed a ban on billboard lighting during the crisis. Officials also acknowledge that some gas- and oil-fueled thermoelectric plants are producing below capacity while undergoing repairs.
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