SAO PAULO, Dec 11 (Reuters) – About 1.5 million homes and businesses were without electricity on Thursday after an extratropical cyclone swept through Sao Paulo’s metropolitan area, toppling trees and power lines and disrupting flights and the water supply.
Damaging wind storms also caused vast power outages in 2023 and 2024, putting utility firm Enel under intense public scrutiny.
Enel said gusts of up to 98 km/h (61 mph) battered the region during a 12-hour gale on Wednesday, with impacts lingering into Thursday across the city of 11.5 million people and the wider metro region.
About 2 million customers in the area lost electricity during the storm’s peak, Enel said in a statement early on Thursday, adding that service had been restored to 500,000.
Power regulator Aneel demanded

WMBD-Radio

Omak Okanogan County Chronicle
New York Post Travel
ABC News
ABC News Weather
KOLR10 News
KNOE
WAND TV
KGNS
NECN Providence
The Gazette
K2 Radio Local
The Blade