Caracas: The collapse of the power grid was yet another setback for a country whose oil reserves made it one of Latin America's wealthiest decades ago.
Various video images confirm the partial destruction of the Simon Bolivar Hydroelectric plant, also known as the Guri dam, due to fire at the facility, which provides most of the country's electricity.
There have also been numerous fires and explosions at various substations throughout the capital.
"How have the breakdowns occurred? Due to fires in the transmission substations," explained Winston Cabas,President of AVIEM, the Venezuelan Association of Mechanic and Electric Engineering.
"The undergrowth has grown a lot, there is a spark that causes a fire, the lines are overheated thermally, the protections in the hydroelectric plant are triggered. Those turbines are taken out of service, the other transmission line gets overheated and all the hydroelectric generation goes out of service."
Venezuela's power grid first crashed on March 7, throwing almost all of the oil-rich nation's 30 million residents into chaos.