Transcript
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Erica Barras (0:18)
This is Planet Money from npr.
Nick Fountain (0:23)
Cuba is in crisis. Since January, the US has been preventing almost all oil from reaching the island.
Erica Barras (0:32)
Doctors can't get to the hospitals where they work. Many buses aren't running. Trucks can't deliver food and medicine where they're needed. People's lives are in danger because there are frequent and long blackouts in the last few weeks.
Nick Fountain (0:45)
On more than one occasion, the entire country has lacked power. In one case for more than a full day.
Erica Barras (0:52)
We wanted to understand what it's like for people trying to make their way in Cuba right now, what it's like to try to work or to run
Nick Fountain (1:00)
a business, because even though Cuba has a communist government, at times, it's also had a pretty thriving private business sector.
Erica Barras (1:09)
But recently, these blackouts have become so frequent that it's hard to even charge your phone. Cell service and Internet are spotty, so. So I've been talking to people through voice notes, like this farmer lady Casamiro, who says she can only use her phone for about two hours a day and never knows when.
Nick Fountain (1:33)
She also told us right now she has no gas, so she can't get to the other farmers she works with. Hola, Erica. Buen dia. Buen dia.
Erica Barras (1:40)
A hotel manager Namedos Garcia told me, when the electricity's out, you have to keep the fridge closed, try not to open it, and then when the electricity comes back on, you jump into action.
Nick Fountain (1:55)
A lot of people said that if the power comes on in the middle of the night, that's when they cook. That's when they work on their computers, use their phone.
Erica Barras (2:03)
Like this guy who runs a bicycle business.
Ricardo Torres (2:05)
Hola, Erica Gonzalez Cabrera.
