Lima and Callao face up to 10-hour power cuts across 8 districts on March 27

Thousands of residents across eight districts will experience service disruption affecting daily activities, food storage, and access to electricity-dependent services.
Thousands of residents will wake to darkness on a Friday morning
Pluz Energía Perú has scheduled power cuts across eight districts in Lima and Callao on March 27 for grid maintenance.

En las ciudades que nunca terminan de despertar, a veces la luz se apaga por voluntad propia. El viernes 27 de marzo, Pluz Energía Perú interrumpirá el suministro eléctrico en ocho distritos de Lima y Callao durante períodos de hasta diez horas, como parte de trabajos de mantenimiento en la red. Lo que la empresa describe como una necesidad técnica, miles de familias lo vivirán como una jornada de adaptación forzada, recordatorio de cuánto depende la vida moderna de un hilo invisible de corriente.

  • Ocho distritos —entre ellos Comas, San Juan de Lurigancho y Los Olivos— perderán electricidad durante ventanas de entre tres y diez horas el mismo día, afectando simultáneamente a decenas de miles de hogares.
  • La interrupción no es solo inconveniencia doméstica: semáforos apagados, negocios paralizados, personas que trabajan desde casa sin conexión, y pacientes dependientes de equipos eléctricos enfrentan riesgos reales.
  • Pluz Energía Perú ha emitido recomendaciones concretas —cargar dispositivos, almacenar agua, mantener linternas a mano y no abrir el refrigerador— para reducir el impacto de una ausencia que puede durar toda una mañana y tarde.
  • La empresa habilita múltiples canales de atención: línea telefónica, WhatsApp y la aplicación Mi Pluz, ofreciendo una vía de comunicación mientras la infraestructura física permanece en silencio.
  • El corte está programado y es inevitable; lo único que queda en manos de los afectados es la preparación, aunque para los más vulnerables incluso eso tiene límites.

El viernes 27 de marzo, miles de residentes de Lima y Callao amanecerán sin electricidad. Pluz Energía Perú ha programado cortes en ocho distritos por trabajos de mantenimiento en la red eléctrica, con interrupciones que van de tres a diez horas según la zona.

Comas y San Juan de Lurigancho sufrirán los cortes más prolongados, de 8 a.m. a 6 p.m. Los Olivos y San Martín de Porres perderán el suministro entre las 9 a.m. y las 3 p.m. San Miguel tendrá una interrupción más breve, de 8:30 a.m. al mediodía, mientras que Callao quedará sin luz entre la 1:30 p.m. y las 4:30 p.m. Fuera de la capital, Huacho y comunidades de montaña como Nava y Tinta también están en la lista.

La escala es considerable. Solo en San Juan de Lurigancho, decenas de urbanizaciones y asociaciones de vivienda están afectadas, con miles de hogares dentro de cada una. Los efectos se extienden más allá de lo doméstico: negocios cerrados, semáforos apagados, trabajadores remotos sin conexión y personas mayores dependientes de equipos médicos eléctricos enfrentan una jornada de riesgo real.

La empresa ha pedido a los vecinos que carguen sus dispositivos antes del corte, almacenen agua en recipientes, tengan linternas a mano y mantengan el refrigerador cerrado para preservar los alimentos. Para consultas o reportes, Pluz Energía Perú atiende por teléfono al 517-1717, por WhatsApp al 939 605 111 y a través de la aplicación Mi Pluz.

La compañía justifica los cortes como mantenimiento necesario para evitar fallas mayores. Puede que sea cierto. Pero para quien trabaja de noche, para el pequeño comerciante que perderá un día entero de ventas, o para la familia con un enfermo en casa, la explicación técnica no alivia la espera. El corte llegará de todas formas.

On Friday, March 27, thousands of residents across Lima and Callao will wake to darkness. Pluz Energía Perú, the utility company serving the region, has scheduled a series of power cuts affecting eight districts as part of planned maintenance and repair work on the electrical grid. The outages will last anywhere from three to ten hours depending on location, with some neighborhoods losing power for the entire morning and afternoon.

Comas will experience the longest disruption, with electricity cut from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. San Juan de Lurigancho faces the same ten-hour window. In Los Olivos and San Martín de Porres, the blackout runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. San Miguel will be without power for just three and a half hours, from 8:30 a.m. to noon. Callao's outage is scheduled for the early afternoon, 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Beyond the capital, residents in Huacho and the mountain communities of Nava and Tinta will also be affected, with cuts ranging from five to eight and a half hours.

The affected areas are not small pockets of the city. In San Juan de Lurigancho alone, dozens of neighborhoods and housing associations are on the list—Nueva Vida, Las Lomas, Las Casuarinas, Juan Pablo II, El Mirador de la Virgen, El Molino, and many others. Each neighborhood contains multiple blocks, each block multiple households. The scale of disruption is substantial, touching tens of thousands of people simultaneously.

The utility company has issued practical guidance for those in the affected zones. Residents are urged to charge all electronic devices before the outage begins—phones, laptops, tablets, anything that might be needed during the blackout. Water should be stored in containers, since pumps that supply water to homes often depend on electricity. Non-perishable foods and items that require minimal preparation are recommended. Refrigerators and freezers should remain closed; opening them repeatedly will allow cold air to escape and food to spoil faster. Flashlights should be kept accessible and batteries checked.

These are not casual suggestions. A ten-hour power cut in a city of nearly ten million people creates cascading effects. Businesses lose revenue. Hospitals and clinics must rely on backup generators. Schools may close or operate on reduced schedules. Traffic lights go dark, creating congestion and safety hazards. People working from home cannot work. Elderly residents dependent on electric medical equipment face genuine risk. The poor, who often live in neighborhoods with less reliable infrastructure, suffer disproportionately.

Pluz Energía Perú has provided multiple channels for residents to seek information or report problems. A customer service line operates at 517-1717, with a separate business line at 517-1718. The company also accepts messages via WhatsApp at 939 605 111. Those with smartphones can use the Mi Pluz app to check their account, make payments, or report outages in real time. Physical service centers remain open for those who prefer in-person assistance.

The company frames these cuts as necessary maintenance—work that keeps the grid functioning, that prevents larger failures down the road. That may be true. But for the person who works nights and sleeps during the day, or the small business owner who cannot afford to lose a full day's revenue, or the family with a sick child who needs a fan running in the Lima heat, the reasoning offers little comfort. The cuts are coming regardless, scheduled and unavoidable. All that remains is preparation.

Residents are urged to take necessary precautions to mitigate the disruptions caused by this interruption
— Pluz Energía Perú
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does a utility company announce these cuts so far in advance? Why not just do the work at night?

Model

The work they're describing—maintenance and repairs on the grid itself—often can't happen safely at night or without disrupting service. And announcing it gives people time to prepare, to charge devices, to make arrangements. It's the lesser of two evils.

Inventor

But ten hours is a long time. What happens to people who depend on electricity for medical reasons?

Model

That's the real tension. Hospitals have generators. But a person at home on a ventilator or dialysis machine? They're supposed to have backup power, but not everyone does. The company doesn't really address that in their announcement.

Inventor

San Juan de Lurigancho is one of the largest districts in Lima. How many people are we talking about?

Model

Hundreds of thousands live there. The list of affected neighborhoods reads like a small city unto itself. When you see names like Nueva Vida, Las Lomas, Juan Pablo II—those are massive housing complexes, not single blocks.

Inventor

Is this common? Do these cuts happen regularly?

Model

The source doesn't say, but the tone suggests it's routine enough that the utility has a standard playbook—the same advice about flashlights and water storage, the same contact channels. It's normalized disruption.

Inventor

What's the actual work being done? Do they explain that?

Model

No. They just say maintenance and repairs. You don't get to know what's broken or what they're fixing. You just know you won't have power.

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