Aging Generator Blamed for St. Thomas-St. John Blackouts as WAPA Eyes Wednesday Recovery

V.I. Water and Power Authority CEO Karl Knight says that consumers in the St. Thomas-St. John district may find relief from rotational outages by mid-week.

2026-03-24 16:51:55 - VI News Staff

Mr. Knight, speaking at Monday’s Government House press briefing, says that the source of the problem which began last Thursday was the mechanical failure of an aging power generator at the Randall Harley Power Plant.

Unit 15 typically provides approximately 18 megawatts of power, Mr. Knight disclosed. When it failed around midday on Thursday, it left the plant unable to meet the power needs of the district. Without Unit 15, the power plant is falling short of peak demand by about 5 megawatts. “I know these outages have been frustrating,” Mr. Knight said, acknowledging the disruption to schools, workplaces, and households. “I assure you that our plant personnel are working around the clock to resume our full service.”

When it was installed in 1980, Unit 15 had an operational life expectancy of 30 years. Almost 46 years later, the issue becomes self-evident. “This is not an issue related to fuel. This is not an issue related to payment or financial issues,” Mr. Knight clarified, seeking to distance the current crisis from WAPA’s past fiscal woes. “This is simply a matter of aging infrastructure that we continue to do our best to maintain.” Equipment failures due to aging infrastructure and long-deferred maintenance is not new to WAPA. “Our plant personnel are doing a yeoman’s job in keeping these units functioning until such time as we can get proper replacement,” Mr. Knight stated.



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