Skipper Seizure: Cuba's Energy Crisis Deepens Amid U.S. Sanctions Crackdown

Following the U.S. seizure of the Venezuelan-linked oil tanker Skipper earlier this month, new developments are exacerbating Cuba's energy woes. The incident has spotlighted Havana's fuel resale schemes and deterred other shipments, heightening fears of prolonged blackouts and shortages on the island.

The U.S. Coast Guard's seizure of the Skipper tanker on December 10-11, 2025, in the Caribbean Sea off Venezuela—carrying up to 2 million barrels of sanctioned crude, with a portion destined for Cuba—has reverberated across the region. As detailed in prior coverage, the vessel was part of a 'dark fleet' evading sanctions, prompting condemnation from Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro as 'piracy' and applause from U.S. officials targeting illicit oil networks.

For Cuba, heavily reliant on Venezuelan oil under opaque agreements, the Skipper incident has exposed a long-standing fuel resale network. While some crude powers the island's energy and transport, much is resold abroad for hard currency, yet this has not improved infrastructure like thermoelectric plants or public transit.

Complications have mounted at Venezuela's PDVSA. Post-seizure, buyers are demanding steeper discounts amid confiscation fears. Reuters reports the Benin-flagged Boltaris, carrying 300,000 barrels of Russian naphtha to Venezuela, turned back to Europe without unloading. Four other vessels have paused plans to load at Venezuelan ports, though Chevron exports continue under U.S. permits.

Cuba's structural vulnerabilities are laid bare: dependence on shadowed routes and sanction-shadowed ships translates to electricity shortages, industrial halts, and rising discontent. With the population bracing for worse, the Skipper saga underscores the fragility of Havana's energy lifeline.

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Protesters marching in Havana streets at night during blackouts caused by fuel crisis, with signs blaming the U.S. blockade.
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Cuba acknowledges running out of fuel reserves amid protests

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Cuba's energy minister Vicente de la O Levy stated the country has no reserves of diesel or fuel oil for its power plants. The situation has caused widespread blackouts and sporadic protests in Havana. President Miguel Díaz-Canel blamed the crisis on the U.S. energy blockade.

Cuba has begun restoring power following a nationwide grid collapse on Saturday evening—the second total blackout in less than a week and third major outage this month—affecting around 10 million people after a major power plant in Nuevitas failed. Officials established microgrids for essential services amid chronic fuel shortages and grid unreliability.

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The Russian tanker Anatoly Kolodkin, carrying more than 700,000 barrels of crude oil, arrived at Cuba's Matanzas port, 100 kilometers from Havana, on March 30, 2026, and is awaiting unloading. US President Donald Trump stated he has no problem with the delivery, as Cuba needs it to survive. The sanctioned vessel received permission from the US Coast Guard.

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