President Nicolas Maduro's government declared a 90-day “emergency” in
Venezuela's electricity sector this week to speed up infrastructure work
and equipment imports needed to prevent politically-contentious power
cuts
Officials have blamed periodic blackouts on sabotage and excessive
consumption, while critics say the sector is suffering from poor
management and inefficiency following the late popular leader Hugo
Chavez's nationalization of the sector.
Maduro, who won a vote to succeed his former mentor Chavez this
month, has promised a government of “efficiency” to tackle day-to-day
problems like power outages plaguing the 29 Venezuelans, especially in
the provinces.
A decree in the official Gazette ordered state power company Corpolec
to adopt “all technical and economic” measures necessary to maintain
electricity services, and authorized the army to guard key installations
against “vandalism and attacks.”
Power rationing has returned to some states, reviving memories of a
prolonged crisis in the sector in 2010 that weighed on Chavez's
popularity at the time.
Saying Venezuela now had the highest per capita consumption in Latin
America Maduro has announced a new national “Electricity Mission” to
stabilize the sector.
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