After Quakes, Puerto Rico's Electricity Is Back On For Most, But Uncertainty Remains

puerto-rico-aftermath

Some in Puerto Rico are beginning to fear the ground will never stop shaking. The island has been pummeled by hundreds of earthquakes in recent weeks, including the recent 5.9 magnitude temblor, where there were reports of landslides in the town of Peñuelas along the southern coast, rattling residents already on edge from the massive 6.4 magnitude quake.

That was the largest to strike the island in more than a century causing hundreds of structures to crumble, forcing thousands from their homes and leaving millions without power. One person was killed and several others injured.

Utility says 99% of customers have electricity

Puerto Rico's public utility, PREPA, tweeted some welcome news Monday: that nearly all of the homes and businesses it serves have had electric power restored. Still it is urging customers to conserve energy.

Reporting from the port city of Ponce, NPR's Adrian Florido said the Costa Sur Plant, which produces more than 40% of Puerto Rico's electricity, was badly damaged in last week's quake. It remains offline indefinitely.

He also reports many residents are still reeling from the devastation caused by Hurricane Maria, a deadly Category 4 storm that battered the island in September 2017. The storm exposed the fact that buildings across the island were not up to code. The series of earthquakes are only amplifying fears that structures have been further weakened.

"People aren't coping terribly well," Florido said on NPR's Morning Edition Monday.

Many earthquake victims sleeping outdoors

Florido spoke to one displaced resident, Leticia Espada, who said more than 50 homes in her town of Guayanilla, about an hour drive east of the port city of Ponce, had collapsed.

After sleeping outside for days on her patio following Tuesday's quake, she eventually came to her town's baseball stadium where she's been sleeping on one of hundreds of government-issued cots.

She's like so many others sleeping in open-air shelters, many unwilling to go back to their homes until they've been deemed safe.

"Thousands of people across several towns sleeping in tents or under tarps, or out in the open, protected by nothing but the shade of a tree with no sense of when these quakes are going to stop," Florido reports.

After Quakes, Puerto Rico's Electricity Is Back On For Most, But Uncertainty Remains On-Line Buyer's Guide

The Electricity Forum Online Transmission & Distribution Buyer's Guide is an interactive reference tool for buyers and specifiers, providing information on equipment, companies, products and services for North America's electrical industry. Search through hundreds of leading Suppliers and thousands of product categories. Add Your Company Today!

Free After Quakes, Puerto Rico's Electricity Is Back On For Most, But Uncertainty Remains Magazine Subscription

The Electricity Forum is a North American "value added" publisher of Transmission & Distribution print/digital magazine: Electricity Today - a leading electrical transmission and distribution magazine. Magazine is distributed FREE of charge to North American electrical industry professionals.

Contribute To The Electricity Forum

The Electricity Forum is interested in publishing your technical, non-commercial articles, on a wide variety of subjects. We are seeking original content for our Transmission and Distribution Channels. Click here to view our author guidelines and submit your article today!