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Power shortages

cccmedia

Electrical power outages lasting up to

three hours each may be expected

through the rest of December according to

the Ministry of Energy.


The outages are the result of low water

levels in Ecuador's rivers and allegedly

poor preparations by the just-ended

Lasso Adminiistration.


The new administration says the outages

will not have to be imposed during the

Christmas and New Years weekends.


Credit

See also

Living in Ecuador: the expat guideManaging mailboxes or PO boxes in EcuadorManaging meals in EcuadorRoad safety in EcuadorMost common scams in EcuadorFixed Deposit Interest RatesTaxes for expats in Ecuador
rkg695

馃挏馃尯馃挏馃挏馃嚚馃嚧馃挏鈿★笍馃攲 Gracias a Colombia 馃挏

Energy Minister reaches agreement with Colombia to continue power transfers at a lower cost; The day before Ecuadorians face an extra hour of electric blackouts, Energy Minister Andrea Arrobo announced she has signed an agreement with Colombia to maintain the transfer of electricity to Ecuador at a reduced cost.

鈥淭his is very good news and demonstrates the good will of Colombia toward Ecuador."

..."Colombia is experiencing its own hydroelectric power deficit due to the El Ni帽o phenomenon, but it is expanding its thermal generation capacity to fill its own needs as well as to help with ours,鈥

Ed Heade

@rkg695: FOX WEATHER NEWS Published December 14, 2023 9:50am EST

El Nino appears to be on verge of rapid collapse

When sea surface temperature anomalies reach 0.5 degrees Celsius (0.9 degrees Fahrenheit) or warmer than what is typical, an El Ni帽o is considered to be underway. An El Ni帽o is one of three phases of the El Ni帽o-Southern Oscillation or what is commonly referred to as the ENSO. The current El Nino event started in June 2023.

rkg695

@Ed Heade ...let's hope. However mother nature changes her mind like the direction of the wind. we'll have to wait and see鈥


Although NOAA鈥檚 latest forecast now suggests El Ni帽o may be over as soon as April (?), a month earlier than last month鈥檚 forecast, and the probability of El Ni帽o conditions remaining in April has dropped from 62% to 37%. ...like any weather event, forecasts that greatly deviate from the consensus are considered to be outliers and not reliable.


A tool that some forecasters use to determine the status of El Ni帽o and La Ni帽a events is the Southern Oscillation Index, or what is commonly referred to as the SOI. The index measures pressure differences in the southwest Pacific, and when the gauge turns substantially positive, a La Ni帽a event is likely happening or on the way. The reverse is also true, and when figures are markedly negative, an El Ni帽o event is likely in progress.


Recent values provided by Australia鈥檚 Queensland Government show a streak of positive figures that have impacted the SOI count. In fact, at times, during the last 30 and 90 days, the figure has weakened below what is typically considered an El Ni帽o event. El Ni帽os are known to exist when figures are at -8 on the index scale, and La Ni帽as exist when the average figure is around a positive 8. The latest SOI values were -7.86 for the last 90 days and -3.88 for the last 30 days, which at a glance would argue against there being an El Ni帽o around, but values change daily and could easily reach El Ni帽o status again.


Despite pressures in Darwin and Tahiti indicating that El Ni帽o could be on its last leg, NOAA data depictions from satellites show no evidence of an emerging neutral or La Ni帽a signal.