Current:Home > FinanceHundreds of thousands still in the dark three days after violent storm rakes Brazil’s biggest city -Streamline Finance
Hundreds of thousands still in the dark three days after violent storm rakes Brazil’s biggest city
View
Date:2025-04-12 08:53:46
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — At least 400,000 customers in Brazil’s biggest city still had no electricity Monday, three days after a violent storm plunged millions into darkness around Sao Paulo, the power distribution company Enel said.
The storm, with winds of up to 100 kph (62 mph), caused at least seven deaths, authorities said, and uprooted many large trees, some of which fell on power lines, blacking out entire neighborhoods. At one point on Friday, 4.2 million residents had no power, the newspaper Folha de S. Paulo reported.
In some apartment buildings, condo associations delivered bottles of drinking water to older residents.
José Eraudo Júnior, administrator of a 15-floor building in Sao Paulo’s Butanta neighborhood that didn’t get power back until Monday evening, said electricity went out for all 430 apartments Friday night.
Water in the roof tanks ran out by Saturday evening, while underground reserves could not be tapped because there was no power to run the pumps, he said.
On Sunday, residents were using buckets or empty bottles to collect water from the building’s swimming pool to flush their toilets, he added. With elevators out of service, some had to carry the water up 15 floors by foot.
“It’s not very common to see such a big power outage,” Eduardo Júnior said by phone. “Three days without electricity — nobody remembers such a thing.”
Enel Distribuição São Paulo, one of three companies providing electricity in Sao Paulo, said in a statement Monday afternoon that it had restored power to 1.7 million of its 2.1 million customers affected by the storm, or just over 80%. It said electricity would be reestablished for almost everyone by Tuesday.
“The windstorm that hit the concession area ... was the strongest in recent years and caused severe damage to the distribution network,” Enel said.
veryGood! (223)
Related
- PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day Wednesday August 7, 2024
- Kylie Jenner Is Ready to Build a Fashion Empire With New Line Khy
- Robinson Cano, Pablo Sandoval, and more former MLB stars join budding new baseball league
- Relatives of victims of alleged war crimes in Myanmar seek justice against generals in Philippines
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Massachusetts police searching for Air Force veteran suspected of killing wife; residents urged to stay vigilant
- Murder charge reinstated against former cop in shooting of Eddie Irizarry: Report
- Denver Broncos safety Kareem Jackson's four-game unnecessary roughness suspension reduced
- Breaking debut in Olympics raises question: Are breakers artists or athletes?
- Meta sued by states claiming Instagram and Facebook cause harm in children and teens
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- China announces plan for a new space telescope as it readies to launch its next space station crew
- Nicaragua is ‘weaponizing’ US-bound migrants as Haitians pour in on charter flights, observers say
- Russia maneuvers carefully over the Israel-Hamas war as it seeks to expand its global clout
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Snow hits northern Cascades and Rockies in the first major storm of the season after a warm fall
- Why Cruise driverless cars were just suspended by the California DMV
- 2 young children and their teen babysitter died in a fire at a Roswell home, fire officials said
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
A poison expert researched this drug before his wife died from it. Now he's facing prison.
Drugstore closures create pharmacy deserts in underserved communities
ESPN's Pat McAfee pays Aaron Rodgers; he's an accomplice to Rodgers' anti-vax poison
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Hong Kong cuts taxes for foreign home buyers and stock traders as it seeks to maintain global status
Pope’s big synod on church future produces first document, but differences remain over role of women
UAW expands strike to General Motors' largest factory, where SUVs including the Chevy Tahoe are made