November 23, 2024
Puerto Rico Suffers Islandwide Blackout, Internet Connectivity Crashes As Hurricane Nears

Tropical Storm Fiona intensified into a Category 1 hurricane Sunday as it moved south of Puerto Rico, bringing heavy rains and high winds to some parts of the island.

Hurricane Fiona is the season's sixth named storm and third hurricane. The storm moves west-northwest at 8 mph with maximum sustained winds of 85mph. As of 1400 ET, the National Hurricane Center said Fiona's center was 25 miles south of Ponce, a city with more than 100,000 people on the island's southern coast.

As Fiona approached the island, PowerOutage.US reported an islandwide power blackout:

"Puerto Rico is 100% without power due to a transmission grid failure from Hurricane Fiona." 

This means nearly 1.5 million people tracked by PowerOutage have experienced power disruptions. Puerto Rico's governor, Pedro Pierluisi, confirmed in a tweet the storm knocked out the island's entire electric system. 

Fiona's path includes several large fossil fuel power plants. There's no official confirmation on what power plants were disrupted or if downed transmission lines were the source of the outages. 

Social media users tweeted videos of heavy flooding and damaging winds already battering the island. 

... and internet connectivity crashed with power blackouts across the island.  

Hurricane models show Fiona's future path could be out into the Atlantic by mid-next week. Models have yet to indicate US landfall, though nothing is locked in as far as the future path. 

A hurricane warning is in effect for the U.S. territory. President Biden approved Puerto Rico's emergency declaration earlier today.

Tyler Durden Sun, 09/18/2022 - 16:00

Tropical Storm Fiona intensified into a Category 1 hurricane Sunday as it moved south of Puerto Rico, bringing heavy rains and high winds to some parts of the island.

Hurricane Fiona is the season’s sixth named storm and third hurricane. The storm moves west-northwest at 8 mph with maximum sustained winds of 85mph. As of 1400 ET, the National Hurricane Center said Fiona’s center was 25 miles south of Ponce, a city with more than 100,000 people on the island’s southern coast.

As Fiona approached the island, PowerOutage.US reported an islandwide power blackout:

Puerto Rico is 100% without power due to a transmission grid failure from Hurricane Fiona.” 

This means nearly 1.5 million people tracked by PowerOutage have experienced power disruptions. Puerto Rico’s governor, Pedro Pierluisi, confirmed in a tweet the storm knocked out the island’s entire electric system. 

Fiona’s path includes several large fossil fuel power plants. There’s no official confirmation on what power plants were disrupted or if downed transmission lines were the source of the outages. 

Social media users tweeted videos of heavy flooding and damaging winds already battering the island. 

… and internet connectivity crashed with power blackouts across the island.  

Hurricane models show Fiona’s future path could be out into the Atlantic by mid-next week. Models have yet to indicate US landfall, though nothing is locked in as far as the future path. 

A hurricane warning is in effect for the U.S. territory. President Biden approved Puerto Rico’s emergency declaration earlier today.