HAVANA - The US oil siege, which has worsened an already severe energy crisis, has created two classes of Cubans: Those who use generators or solar panels to power their ovens, and those who have resorted to cooking over open fires.
On the side of a highway on the outskirts of Havana, vendors sell bags of charcoal and makeshift braziers, some fashioned from old washing machine drums.
"Everyone knows what's coming. We don't have fuel in the country; we have to find alternatives," Niurbis Lamothe, a 53-year-old state employee, told AFP after buying a homemade stove.
"The shoe just got tighter than it already was," commented another shopper who declined to give her name as she sized up a bag of charcoal costing 2,600 pesos (US$5.25), roughly half the average monthly salary.
The woman, who has a young child, explained that her salary could not stretch to solar panels or a lithium battery to keep the lights on during power cuts of up to 12 hours a day.
"This is the most affordable way" to cook, she said as she loaded a sack of charcoal onto her electric motorcycle -- the vehicle of choice for many Cubans given severe fuel shortages, which they charge when they have power.
Yurisnel Agosto, the 36-year-old charcoal merchant, confirmed that he "has never sold so much" of the fossil fuel.
Before, his customers were primarily pizzerias or grilled-meat restaurants, who cook over coals; now they are families.
"People come and buy three sacks to be prepared for when there's no electricity," said Agosto, his hands blackened from filling, stacking, and arranging the sacks on the side of the road.
For most Cubans, even charcoal is a luxury, and wood the staple fuel source.
'Desperate'
Cuba, which has been under a US trade embargo for over 60 years, was already struggling through its worst crisis in decades when President Donald Trump took steps to cut off its entire oil supply.
The government has announced drastic measures to ration whatever fuel is left, including preventing airlines refueling on the island.
Sister Gertrudis poses in front of a new photovoltaic system installed in a senior dining hall run by the Catholic Church in the Guanabacoa neighborhood of Havana on February 4, 2026. (Credit: AFP)