How US policies and perceptions impact Puerto Rico’s energy infrastructure

By Cesareo Contreras January 3, 2025
Man sits behind equipment that partially obstructs his face and body. Machinery is bathed in blue light, and behind the man is a yellow and brown wall.

Northeastern University chemistry professor Eugene Smotkin was in his home in the Puerto Rican residential district of Old San Juan when he, like more than a million other residents on the island, lost power on New Year’s Eve.

He and his wife first noticed the power went out when the ceiling fan above their bed stopped.

Smotkin considers himself among the more fortunate — his power was restored later that afternoon. Other less tourist-centric areas were hit harder by the outage and it caused headaches for many preparing for celebrations.

“This became a mess for Puerto Ricans in general,” he says. “We didn’t know if we were going to have power on New Year’s Day.”

Read more from Northeastern Global News. 

Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

Sign up for CONNECTS.

The College of Science newsletter delivered straight to your inbox.

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.