Maduro administration urges Venezuelan public to show solidarity in difficult times
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As part of its strategy to tackle drought conditions, the
Venezuelan government headed by President Nicolas Maduro has announced
that there will be daily power cuts. Electricity would be stopped for
four hours a day for 40 days to save energy, the administration said.
This is in addition to the frequent blackouts under which
the country is already reeling. The key aim of the plan, which kicks off
on 25 April, is to ease the pressure on the Guri hydroelectric dam. It
is the Latin American nation's largest power plant, which supplies up to
65% of the country's power. The reservoir has been badly hit by the
recent drought plunging the water level to a historic low.
In a televised address, Electricity Minister Luis Motta
said: "There will be restrictions. It's necessary and it's a sacrifice."
All major cities including capital Caracas will be affected by the
power cuts.
Without using the politically sensitive term "rationing",
Motta urged Venezuelans to show patriotism and solidarity over the
crisis. He added: "With God's help, the rains will come."
The oil sector will be exempted from the blackouts. Maduro's
socialist administration is currently facing acute problems mainly
because of the battered economy and low oil prices. The power cuts are
bound to anger the Venezuelan public who are already struggling to get
essential supplies. The country is striving hard to cope with shortage
of food and increasing incidents of crime.
The Venezuelan government has already tried several measures including
announcing extended weekends
and closing businesses earlier to save electricity. The country will also adjust its time zone by 30 minutes from May 2016.
Maduro's critics accuse the government of failing to
generate electricity through thermoelectric plants. However, Maduro
charges the country's elite with secretly joining hands with the US to
harm the Venezuelan economy. A similar power cut introduced by former
leader Hugo Chavez in 2010 led to a sharp drop in his popularity.
In a separate announcement, Venezuela's main beer producer
Cerveceria Polar said it is halting production because it is running out
of stocks of grains. The company said in a statement: "We have warned
the country about the grave situation we are facing, and we have
exhausted all options to run debts with our international suppliers, all
the while waiting for the government to address the debt problem."
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