Massive
India blackout leaves 300 million without power
Lights
in Delhi and seven other states strand commuters in sweltering heat
29
July, 2012
A
massive grid failure in Delhi and much of northern India left more
than 300 million people without electricity on Monday in one of the
worst blackouts to hit the country in more than a decade.
The
lights in Delhi and seven states went out about 2 a.m and had not
been restored by the morning rush-hour, leaving the capital's workers
sweltering overnight, then stranded at metro stations in the morning
as trains were cancelled.
Blackouts
are frequent in much of the country, including major cities. Chaos
reigned on Delhi's always-hectic roads as stop lights failed.
"I'm
45 minutes late for work. First, no power since 2 in the morning,
then no water to take a shower and now the metro is delayed by 13
minutes after being stuck in traffic for half an hour," said
32-year-old Keshav Shah, who works in a multinational software
company 30 km outside the capital.
"As
if I wasn't dreading Monday enough, this had to happen."
Authorities
made restoring services to hospitals and transport systems a
priority. By mid-morning electricity had returned to parts of Delhi
and Uttar Pradesh, a state with more people than Brazil. Rajasthan,
Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir were also hit.
"We'll
find out the reason and see that such kind of things are avoided in
the future," Ram Nayak, the head of India's state-run Power Grid
Corporation, said.
"The
biggest priority is to connect essential loads back to public
transport systems, whether it be the rail or the airport, hospitals
and other places," he told TV network CNN-IBN.
Officials
at Delhi's international airport said flights were unaffected.
India
has a peak-hour power deficit of about 12 percent, slowing the
economy.
Delhi's private power company, BSES , said northern India
last suffered such a major outage in 2001.
About
40 percent of Indians, or 500 million people, lack electricity.
Delays in opening new power plants and coal mines, among other
things, have held back capacity.
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