The China Mail - Cuba’s bleak oil crisis

USD -
AED 3.6725
AFN 62.999678
ALL 82.360986
AMD 377.742437
ANG 1.789731
AOA 917.00043
ARS 1394.137986
AUD 1.41612
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.69943
BAM 1.672217
BBD 2.020632
BDT 122.590491
BGN 1.647646
BHD 0.377363
BIF 2977.51368
BMD 1
BND 1.27565
BOB 6.946879
BRL 5.177414
BSD 1.003228
BTN 91.769695
BWP 13.282259
BYN 2.906967
BYR 19600
BZD 2.017725
CAD 1.369455
CDF 2225.000241
CHF 0.78448
CLF 0.022366
CLP 883.150004
CNY 6.882503
CNH 6.898925
COP 3768.59
CRC 472.1575
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.277433
CZK 20.917598
DJF 178.652199
DKK 6.426185
DOP 60.246681
DZD 130.726966
EGP 49.730006
ERN 15
ETB 157.043415
EUR 0.86018
FJD 2.20855
FKP 0.746766
GBP 0.75111
GEL 2.701917
GGP 0.746766
GHS 10.759326
GIP 0.746766
GMD 73.000017
GNF 8799.223623
GTQ 7.69507
GYD 209.885515
HKD 7.80952
HNL 26.54924
HRK 6.481502
HTG 131.387361
HUF 330.938035
IDR 16883
ILS 3.100005
IMP 0.746766
INR 92.0398
IQD 1314.283027
IRR 1314544.999608
ISK 123.609662
JEP 0.746766
JMD 157.174921
JOD 0.709
JPY 157.531497
KES 129.200135
KGS 87.445202
KHR 4024.452804
KMF 416.999865
KPW 900.104442
KRW 1474.070307
KWD 0.30741
KYD 0.836059
KZT 499.788377
LAK 21476.056723
LBP 89841.732647
LKR 310.234409
LRD 184.091725
LSL 16.11266
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.364923
MAD 9.241786
MDL 17.21617
MGA 4189.753061
MKD 52.88674
MMK 2099.653012
MNT 3569.497638
MOP 8.083897
MRU 40.000855
MUR 46.930347
MVR 15.460042
MWK 1739.773582
MXN 17.434302
MYR 3.945008
MZN 63.905024
NAD 16.112729
NGN 1371.710298
NIO 36.91892
NOK 9.61881
NPR 146.838246
NZD 1.694185
OMR 0.384491
PAB 1.003258
PEN 3.372478
PGK 4.317137
PHP 58.477019
PKR 280.336197
PLN 3.662165
PYG 6476.078099
QAR 3.669009
RON 4.385304
RSD 101.012534
RUB 77.499334
RWF 1466.328066
SAR 3.752999
SBD 8.05166
SCR 13.67764
SDG 601.493986
SEK 9.201305
SGD 1.277115
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.574969
SLL 20969.49935
SOS 573.395182
SRD 37.749913
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.948676
SVC 8.778703
SYP 110.52498
SZL 16.102919
THB 31.628502
TJS 9.550775
TMT 3.51
TND 2.920792
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.977296
TTD 6.798428
TWD 31.645495
TZS 2560.000019
UAH 43.411742
UGX 3641.447003
UYU 38.578281
UZS 12229.333128
VES 419.462299
VND 26192.5
VUV 118.829543
WST 2.715908
XAF 560.877112
XAG 0.011723
XAU 0.000189
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.808155
XDR 0.697551
XOF 560.869918
XPF 101.969536
YER 238.550052
ZAR 16.26021
ZMK 9001.198008
ZMW 19.162317
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0950

    23.545

    +0.4%

  • NGG

    0.1100

    93.88

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    -0.0800

    26.23

    -0.3%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    23.4

    +0.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    18.2

    -1.1%

  • BCC

    -2.1500

    80.59

    -2.67%

  • BTI

    -0.5300

    62.12

    -0.85%

  • RIO

    0.2700

    99.61

    +0.27%

  • GSK

    -0.8400

    58.29

    -1.44%

  • RELX

    -0.1100

    34.68

    -0.32%

  • JRI

    0.0335

    13.19

    +0.25%

  • AZN

    -4.7200

    203.73

    -2.32%

  • VOD

    -0.1800

    15.18

    -1.19%

  • BP

    0.6100

    39.47

    +1.55%


Cuba’s bleak oil crisis




The arrest of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro in early January 2026, and the subsequent pledge by Washington to reroute Venezuela’s oil away from its Caribbean ally, has jolted Havana into a new economic crisis. Cuba’s lifeline to cheap Venezuelan crude has shrivelled; the last tanker from the state oil company PDVSA left Venezuela’s José port in mid‑December and arrived in Havana with its transponder off, carrying about 600,000 barrels. In 2025 Venezuela supplied roughly 26,500 barrels per day, a third of Cuba’s daily needs, while Mexico contributed about 5,000 barrels. After Maduro’s capture, Venezuelan fuel deliveries stopped altogether and U.S. officials declared a virtual blockade on Caracas’ tankers, leaving Cuba with insufficient oil reserves and only modest shipments from Mexico. Energy analyst Jorge Piñón of the University of Texas warned that there is “no light at the end of the tunnel” for Cuba to survive the next few months without Venezuelan oil.

An energy grid in freefall
Cuba’s antiquated, oil‑fired power grid has lurched from crisis to crisis in recent years. A nationwide grid collapse in March 2025 plunged millions into darkness after a transmission line shorted near Havana, forcing a restart of the entire system and leaving both of the island’s main power stations idle. The collapse followed months of rolling blackouts outside the capital that peaked at 20 hours a day, with entire rural areas losing electricity for longer than they had power. Residents resorted to charcoal fires for cooking and scrambled to obtain ice to keep food cold. Cuba’s top electricity official warned that repairs would be slow, while shortages of fuel, medicine, water and food made life “unbearable”.

Blackouts have triggered social unrest. In March 2024, crowds in Santiago de Cuba banged pots and demanded “power and food” when the lights went out at a state‑run market. Residents interviewed by reporters spoke of electricity outages exceeding 10 hours a day. Energy minister Vicente de la O’Levy publicly acknowledged that shortages of power “provide the spark for any protest”. In November 2024, the government warned that it would not tolerate “public disorder” as scattered demonstrations erupted following another nationwide blackout caused by Hurricane Rafael; prosecutors announced the preventive detention of protesters on charges of assault and vandalism. The state responded by distributing emergency rations and accelerating repairs, but rolling blackouts continue across the country.

Blackouts and sanctions squeeze the economy
Cuba’s economy was already contracting before the current crisis. The pandemic and the near‑total shutdown of tourism caused a 10.9% drop in GDP in 2020, according to international statistics. Minor growth in 2021 and 2022 (1.3% and 1.8%) gave way to a return to recession in 2023–24. The United Nations forecasts a 1.5% decline for 2025, leaving Cuba and Haiti as the only Latin American economies still shrinking. Official statistics show that 11 of the country’s 15 economic sectors are contracting: sugar output is down 68%, fishing 53% and agriculture 52%, while manufacturing has fallen 41%. Export earnings fell by $900 million in 2024 and imports were 18% below forecast. Cuban economists estimate that the economy shrank about 4% in 2024, on top of a 1.9% contraction in 2023.

Blackouts amplify these losses. Economists inside Cuba say that the power crisis has paralysed industry and curtailed transport. Households lose refrigeration; water pumps and medical facilities falter; and businesses without generators lose productive hours. In many provinces, blackouts of 20 hours a day have become routine. A human‑rights blog citing utility reports noted generation shortfalls of 1,300 to 1,700 megawatts, meaning that nearly half of national demand went unmet during peak periods.

The collapse of Venezuelan oil supplies will aggravate this deficit. Cuba produces less than half of the electricity it needs and already imports most of its fuel. PDVSA shipments under the long‑standing “oil for doctors” programme once kept Cuba’s thermoelectric plants running; without them, generation capacity is set to plunge. No other ally is stepping in: energy researcher Piñón notes that Angola, Algeria, Brazil and even Russia have not offered significant support. Mexico’s occasional cargoes of 85,000 barrels are insufficient to “keep the lights on across the island”.

Political strain and regime anxiety
The political ramifications are severe. U.S. President Donald Trump has portrayed the seizure of Maduro as part of a broader crackdown on Latin American regimes. During a January 4 press conference, he said that “Cuba looks like it’s ready to fall”, declaring that the island’s government had no income now that Venezuelan oil was cut off. He threatened further military action against Caracas if the remaining officials did not cooperate, and suggested that Colombia and Mexico could also be targets. Trump’s comments have fuelled speculation about regime change, and have unsettled Cuba’s leadership.

U.S. intelligence reports acknowledge the island’s grim economic state but are ambivalent about whether hardship will topple the government. Confidential assessments described key sectors like agriculture and tourism as “severely strained” by frequent blackouts and trade sanctions. Analysts warned that the loss of oil imports from Venezuela could make governing more difficult. One official said that blackouts outside Havana were lasting an average of 20 hours a day. Yet the assessments concluded that economic suffering does not necessarily translate into regime collapse.

Cuban leaders nevertheless display signs of alarm. President Miguel Díaz‑Canel vowed that “nobody tells us what to do” and pledged to defend the homeland “until the last drop of blood”. The prosecutor’s office warned that it would not tolerate disorder during the blackouts and detained protesters for “assault, public disorder and vandalism”. Energy minister Vicente de la O’Levy admitted that power cuts fuel social tensions. Local officials have rushed to deliver subsidised food to calm restive communities in Santiago and other provinces. Behind the scenes, the government is quietly reassigning fuel supplies, rationing diesel for hospitals and planning emergency imports of floating power plants.

A humanitarian and demographic crisis
The economic implosion is driving an unprecedented exodus. Independent demographers estimate that Cuba’s population has fallen 25% in four years, dropping below nine million as hundreds of thousands migrate annually. A U.S. intelligence official cited by the press suggested that the population is likely under nine million. The loss of younger people erodes the labour force and saps the regime’s support base; an emeritus professor, Richard Feinberg, warns that when people are “really hungry,” they focus on survival rather than politics.

Human development indicators are slipping. The United Nations ranked Cuba 97th in its 2025 human development index, down from 57th in 1990. The energy crisis is battering public health and education. Persistent power cuts of up to 22 hours a day in Santiago de Cuba have undermined hospitals and schools. Diplomats note that Cuba produces less than half of the electricity it needs and argue that “the collapse has already happened”.

Outlook: collapse or endurance?
The fall of Nicolás Maduro removes the central pillar of Cuba’s energy system and intensifies the island’s descent into darkness. Without Venezuelan fuel, Cuba faces longer blackouts, deeper economic contraction and heightened social unrest. Yet history cautions against assuming an imminent regime collapse. The Cuban state retains powerful security services, a one‑party political structure and the ability to ration scarce resources. It has weathered decades of sanctions, the collapse of the Soviet Union and previous “special periods” of hardship.

What is different now is the confluence of crises: an energy grid on the brink, an economy mired in recession, a demographic haemorrhage and the pressure of a hostile U.S. administration. Whether these forces will finally overwhelm the Cuban regime remains uncertain. For ordinary Cubans enduring darkness, ration lines and empty shelves, however, the immediate reality is clear: the fall of Maduro has pushed their country towards its most severe crisis in decades.