Brazil blackout blamed on storm, grid in spotlight

SAO PAULO, (Reuters) – Brazil’s government blamed a  severe storm for the power outage that put the country’s  economic heartland in the dark for more than five hours and  raised doubts about the reliability of its energy grid.

Tuesday night’s blackout, Brazil’s worst in a decade, left  tens of millions of people without power across most of the  wealthy southeastern region, halting subways and snarling  traffic in major cities like Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.

A combination of lightning, rain and heavy winds caused  three transmission lines to short-circuit in Sao Paulo state,  setting off a ripple effect that forced the massive Itaipu  hydroelectric plant on the border with Paraguay to shut down  automatically, Energy Minister Edison Lobao said on Wednesday.

“Our grid is strong and resistant but there are moments  that the system simply can’t withstand,” Lobao told a news  conference in the capital Brasilia, stressing that  weather-related blackouts are commonplace around the world.

Responding to criticism the government has neglected to  maintain and upgrade Brazil’s energy infrastructure, President  Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said investment in transmission lines  over the last seven years amounted to 30 percent of what had  been spent over the preceding 120 years.

“We didn’t have a failure in the generation of energy, we  had a problem in the transmission line,” Lula told reporters in  Brasilia.

Brazil’s economy, fueled by a global commodities boom and a  vast consumer market at home, has forged ahead in recent years  under former union leader Lula and was quick to shrug off the  global financial crisis.

But transport and energy infrastructure remain weak points  for Latin America’s largest country, which will host the soccer  World Cup in 2014 and the Olympic Games two years later.

“This shows that Brazil is very vulnerable. You can’t leave  a country the size of Brazil hostage to accidents,” said  Adriano Pires, director of the Brazilian Center for  Infrastructure Studies in Rio de Janeiro.

Lobao, the energy minister, denied the problem was caused  by computer hackers. U.S. television network CBS reported in  its “60 Minutes” program this month that blackouts in Brazil in  2005 and 2007 may have been caused by “cyber attacks,” quoting  mostly unnamed U.S. intelligence sources.

The blackout hit 18 of Brazil’s 26 states and all of  Paraguay, which gets about 90 percent of its power from the  Itaipu dam, was left in the dark for about 15 minutes.  Paraguay’s state electricity company said the problem  originated in Brazil.