
On the balconies and roofs of Havana, a new object is gradually appearing in the landscape: the solar panel, which completes the treasures of resourcefulness deployed on an island lacking everything. Connected to small batteries, it allows you to operate the television, a fan, and enough to recharge the phone when the power goes out. The equipment is essential, in the face of general cuts in an obsolete network, whose capacity is even more undermined, since Washington prevents fuel deliveries from Venezuela to power generators.
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