600 Million in India Lose Power in World's Largest Blackout

 By 
Zoe Fox
 on 
600 Million in India Lose Power in World's Largest Blackout
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India, the country home to the world's second largest population of 1.2 billion, is in the midst of what's possibly the largest electrical failure in history. More than 600 million people are without power throughout 11 provinces in the Indian north and east.

The country experienced its first major outages Monday, which affected upwards of 350 million people -- more than the entire U.S. population. New Dehli, the capital city whose metro area is home to more than 20 million people, was left in the dark by both power failures. According to Indian Railways, at least 300 trains have been canceled due to the outages.

The New York Times reports that Tuesday afternoon's outage is the largest outage ever on record, effecting the equivalent of most of Europe's population or more than the population on North and Central America combined.

India's power minister hasn't specified the root cause of the problem, though he says there are problems with the country's power grid. Some are speculating that states are using more power than the grid can handle, causing the outage.

Sporadic power outages are the norm in most of India, where local power supplies regularly cut out for several hours a day.

Take a look at the below Storify to get a sense of how the regions experiencing the outage have been affected.

[View the story "600 Million in India Lose Power in World's Largest Ever Blackout" on Storify]

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