Venezuela is shortening the workweek for public sector workers to just Monday and Tuesday, in an effort to save power as a drought pushes the water level to new lows at the country's main hydroelectric dam.
President Nicolas Maduro announced the change in his weekly television address, adding that the shortened workweek would last "at least two weeks," Reuters reported.
Maduro "said the water level behind the nation's largest dam has fallen to near its minimum operating level thanks to a severe drought," The Associated Press reported.
He blamed the El Niño weather pattern, and said conditions "would return to normal when it started raining again,"
the BBC reports.
According to the wire service, experts have also blamed a "lack of planning and maintenance."
Venezuela's 2.8 million government workers were already on a truncated schedule in an effort to save power. Earlier this month, the country declared it would give public sector workers Fridays off for several months,
as the Two-Way has reported
The latest announcement also comes less than a week after the government said it would be
shutting off power
Critics say the move will make little difference because of the power that government workers will use from their homes.
"Maduro says that 'we in government don't stop working for a second'. Of course. Except for Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays!" satirized Leonardo Padron, a columnist for pro-opposition El Nacional newspaper, via Twitter,"
Reuters reports
The electricity crisis is just one of a slew of challenges facing oil-rich Venezuela, whose economy has been hit hard by the drop in global oil prices.
As the Financial Times reports
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