Rural Cuba empties out due to resource disparities

In Vertientes, Camagüey Province, rural communities endure prolonged blackouts and service shortages, driving mass migration to cities. Residents invest in solar panels to cope, but many choose to leave their homes. Demographic studies confirm young women lead this exodus, worsened by the economic crisis.

In the small town of Vertientes, Camagüey Province, solar panels have dotted the landscape due to electricity cuts averaging just four hours a day in 2025. Resident Milagros Malpica invested nearly $1,000 in a basic photovoltaic system, funded by the family farm and remittances from her children in the United States. “It’s a tremendous investment, but there’s no other way to live. Not just because of the long hours without power, but because when it returns, it arrives with low voltage and you have to wait for it to stabilize,” Malpica explained, noting food losses from spoiled refrigerators that exceeded the equipment's cost.

Local driver Yariel plans to relocate to Camagüey city in 2026 with his family, selling their rural home. “From Vertientes, the only thing left to do is leave,” he stated, decrying the lack of priority for rural electricity repairs, where bateyes have gone weeks without service. “The countryside is emptying out; everyone wants to go to town. With no transportation, doctors, or jobs, who wouldn’t think about leaving?” he reasoned.

These challenges stem from uneven resource allocation: since 2000, 50-60% of the investment budget has gone to Havana, home to less than 20% of the population, per the National Office of Statistics and Information (ONEI). Provincial capitals get 70% of the remainder, leaving just 30% for smaller municipalities. Thus, Havana residents receive three times the investment of those in provincial capitals and nine times more than in rural small towns.

A September 2023 study by the University of Havana's Center for Demographic Studies (CEDEM) shows young women emigrating most, followed by men under 50 and children. “There are many factors: difficulties in marketing products, transportation issues, access to health and education,” researcher María Ofelia Pérez noted. The national census, delayed multiple times by the crisis, aims to quantify this depopulation, which has shrunk Cuba's population by 1.5 million since 2022, to 9.6 million by end-2025. In April assemblies of the National Association of Small Farmers (ANAP), president Félix Duarte Ortega acknowledged the average co-op worker age nears 60, calling for “concrete actions.”

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Cuban workers repair power infrastructure in Nuevitas after nationwide blackout, with dark Havana skyline and microgrids in background.
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Cuba launches recovery after second nationwide blackout in a week

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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.

Following Wednesday's collapse of Cuba's National Electric System due to a failure at the Matanzas-based Antonio Guiteras power plant, residents in this eastern city face prolonged outages exceeding 30 hours, forcing a reorganization of daily life amid growing resignation.

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Cuban officials outlined on Mesa Redonda measures to counter the intensified U.S. energy blockade, which has blocked fuel shipments for over three months. First Deputy Minister of Energy and Mines Argelio Jesús Abad Vigoa stated that over 1,400 MW of installed capacity remains idle due to lack of crude oil. Progress includes domestic production, renewables, and restorations to stabilize the grid.

At the Popular Savings Bank in San José de las Lajas, monthly pension payout days create endless lines and tensions among customers. Prioritized retirees overwhelm services, leaving other users unattended amid fears of running out of cash. Concerns over power outages and cash shortages dominate the daily scene.

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Garbage accumulation in Matanzas, Cuba, has shifted from occasional to a permanent urban feature, worsened by a fuel crisis cutting waste collection frequency. Residents burn trash piles to fend off pests, producing toxic smoke. Violeta González, 75, collects aluminum cans from dumps daily to make ends meet.

Cuba's National Office of Statistics and Information (ONEI) reported 298,000 tourists arriving in January, February, and March 2026, a 48% drop from 573,300 in the same period of 2025. The energy crisis, worsened by geopolitical tensions, has severely impacted the sector. Airlines have suspended flights and internal transport faces major limitations.

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Ihosvanny Cordoves returned to Cuba after three years and found a worsened situation with blackouts, high prices, and a chikungunya epidemic. At Santiago de Cuba airport, he faced disorder and delays, while a bus trip was complicated by a breakdown. His experience highlights everyday struggles on the island between fatigue and hope.

 

 

 

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