COSTA MAR
Costa Mar's power surplus narrows as regional demand surges
Reservoir levels slip as neighbouring regions draw more hydroelectric exports; dry season margin tightens
Mateo Reyes1,089 wordsEdition № 16Thursday, 4 June 2026 — Edition № 16
Puerto Azul — The Río Esperanto's reservoir system is running lower than expected this early in the dry season, according to readings released yesterday by the Federal Hydro Authority. The shortfall reflects not drought, but rising demand from neighbouring regions, which have increased their draws on Costa Mar's surplus capacity by an estimated fifteen percent since the start of the year.
The tightening margin has begun to reshape conversations in the Marine Ministry and among cooperative leaders who depend on stable power exports as a revenue stream. Governor Solomon Adeyemi acknowledged the pressure in a statement but emphasized that the region remains committed to its federal power-sharing obligations. The question now is whether that commitment can hold through the dry season without constraining local investment in conservation infrastructure.
The Federal Hydro Authority's monthly bulletin, due to be published on June fifteenth, is expected to clarify whether the current trend reflects a temporary spike in demand or a structural shift in how the other regions are consuming electricity. Costa Mar's dive cooperatives and reef-monitoring stations depend on uninterrupted power; any reduction in local supply would ripple through the conservation sector.
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