Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 8
Cuba's Antique Taxis Sit Idle in Fuel Crisis as Blackouts Stretch to 20 Hours
Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 8

Cuba's Antique Taxis Sit Idle in Fuel Crisis as Blackouts Stretch to 20 Hours

3 articles · Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 8

Summary

  • Fuel shortages that have gripped Cuba since January are sidelining many of the island’s vintage “almendrones,” shared taxis that remain central to daily transport and small-business income.
  • Cuba produces only about 40% of the fuel it consumes, and officials say tighter U.S. sanctions and threats against countries shipping oil to the island have choked imports; only one Russian tanker has arrived since then.
  • 20 liters of gasoline can require months on a government reservation app, while black-market fuel can cost up to $8 a liter, leaving drivers unable to work and residents facing blackouts lasting up to 20 hours.
  • The squeeze is hitting a transport system that still relies heavily on the old American cars because newer vehicles are unaffordable for most Cubans, even as electric motorcycles and small EVs begin appearing.

Insights

Can Cuba's crippling fuel crisis accidentally create a renewable energy model for the Caribbean?
As its classic American cars go silent, is Cuba’s soul being replaced by Chinese e-bikes?
As Cuba's power grid collapses, is a humanitarian catastrophe or a 'friendly takeover' imminent?