370 million lose power in India

Passengers sit in a train Monday, July 30, 2012, waiting for power to get restored at a railway station in New Delhi, India.
Passengers sit in a train Monday, July 30, 2012, waiting for power to get restored at a railway station in New Delhi, India.

— Northern India’s power grid crashed Monday, halting hundreds of trains, forcing hospitals and airports to use backup generators and leaving 370 million people — more than the population of the United States and Canada combined — sweltering in the summer heat.

The blackout was one of the worst to hit India in a decade.

The northern grid crashed about 2:30 a.m. because it could no longer keep up with the huge demand for power in the hot summer, officials in the state of Uttar Pradesh said. However, Power Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde said he was not sure exactly what caused the collapse and had formed a committee to investigate it.

The grid feeds the nation’s breadbasket in Punjab; the war-wracked region of Kashmir; the capital, New Delhi; the Dalai Lama’s Himalayan headquarters in Dharmsala; and the world’s most populous state, the poverty-stricken Uttar Pradesh.

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