
More than a million people were left without power Thursday and dozens of flights were cancelled, a day after a cyclone triggered gale-force winds in Brazil's economic capital Sao Paulo, authorities said.
The megalopolis was battered by winds of more than 90 kilometers (55 miles) per hour) on Wednesday, the Sao Paulo state government said in a statement.
This left more than two million people without electricity, 1.2 million of whom had yet to see their power restored almost 24 hours later.
Power utility firm Enel said in a statement that the 12-hour windstorm was considered "historic," with toppled trees hitting power lines.
"The weather event caused severe damage to the electrical infrastructure," said Enel.
The Sao Paulo municipality said in a statement it had received reports of 231 fallen trees.
The state government demanded Enel provide its plan for dealing with such emergency situations, as anger grew over television images of the electricity company's parking lot full of vehicles during the crisis.
The fierce winds also led to hundreds of flight cancellations since Wednesday, sparking chaos at Sao Paulo's two airports, some of the busiest in Latin America, local media reported.
AENA, which operated the city's Congonhas airport, said in a statement that 39 arrivals and 28 departures had been cancelled on Thursday.
fb/mlm
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Scientists solve the mystery of 'impossible' merger of 'forbidden' black holes - 2
What's your #1 tone - 3
From Certificate to Dollars: College Majors with Extraordinary Monetary Prizes - 4
Hezbollah claims right to respond to killing of top commander - 5
Israel reports second missile fire from Yemen since start of Iran war
Dependable Savvy Locks to Update Your Home Security
Make Your Fantasy Closet: 10 Immortal Design Fundamentals
Attacks on Iran's Bushehr nuclear plant and on Iraq border crossing
A definitive Handbook for Securities exchange Money management
Katz alleges Army Radio workers misled High Court in bid to halt closure
Vote In favor of Feasible Way You Prescribe to Shop for Garments
Activist vessel collides with krill trawler in Antarctic confrontation
Rights group: At least 2,500 deaths during protest crackdown in Iran
'The Boys' Season 5 premiere: How to watch for less, what to know about the final series and more













