PREMIUM
VÍCTOR MARTÍNEZ
vmartinez_EM
Updated Sunday, July 26, 2020 - 22:02
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The economic blackout caused by the coronavirus during the months of March, April and May was better illustrated in the energy sector than anywhere else. From one day to the next, companies, businesses and factories turned off their lights and machines and sent thousands of employees to their homes in the face of the dark and uncertain future that was approaching the pandemic. The demand for electricity - one of the electrocardiograms that best takes the pulse of the GDP - sank 20% in sectors such as industry and services, while in households it grew 4% as they gradually became small offices. or remote working classrooms. The streets empty
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