Shutdowns, power outages, and conflict: a review of Q1 2026 Internet disruptions
In Q1 2026, government-directed Internet shutdowns heavily impacted Uganda, Iran, and the Republic of Congo during elections, while military actions disrupted connectivity in Ukraine and damaged AWS data centers in the Middle East. Power outages caused by infrastructure failures or extreme weather led to Internet disruptions in Argentina, Cuba, Moldova, Paraguay, and the Dominican Republic. Technical issues affected providers in the U.S., Guinea, and the U.K., and severe weather cut connectivity in Portugal. Iran's prolonged blackout, lasting through the quarter, marked one of the most extensive Internet disruptions in recent years.
- ▪Uganda implemented a nationwide Internet shutdown during its January 15 presidential election, with full restoration not occurring until January 26.
- ▪Iran experienced two nationwide Internet shutdowns in January and February 2026, with the second persisting through the end of the quarter amid military escalation.
- ▪Cuba faced three major power grid collapses in March 2026, each causing widespread Internet outages due to failing electrical infrastructure.
- ▪Drone strikes damaged Amazon Web Services data centers in the UAE and Bahrain, disrupting cloud operations and increasing connection failures.
- ▪Power outages in Argentina, Paraguay, the Dominican Republic, and Moldova—often linked to grid failures or extreme weather—led to significant but temporary Internet disruptions.
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Shutdowns, power outages, and conflict: a review of Q1 2026 Internet disruptions2026-04-28David Belson11 min readIn the first quarter of 2026, government-directed shutdowns figured prominently, with prolonged Internet blackouts in both Uganda and Iran, a stark contrast to the lack of observed government-directed shutdowns in the same quarter a year prior. This quarter, we also observed a number of Internet disruptions caused by power outages, including three separate collapses of Cuba's national electrical grid. Military action continued to disrupt connectivity in Ukraine and also impacted hyperscaler cloud infrastructure in the Middle East. Severe weather knocked out Internet connectivity in Portugal, while cable damage disrupted connectivity in the Republic of Congo. A technical problem hit Verizon Wireless in the United States, and unknown issues briefly disrupted connectivity for customers of providers in Guinea and the United Kingdom.This post is intended as a summary overview of observed and confirmed disruptions and is not an exhaustive or complete list of issues that have occurred during the quarter. A larger list of detected traffic anomalies is available in the Cloudflare Radar Outage Center. Note that both bytes-based and request-based traffic graphs are used within this post to illustrate the impact of the observed disruptions, with the choice of metric generally made based on which better illustrates the impact of the disruption. Government-directed shutdowns Uganda In advance of the January 15 presidential election, Ugandan authorities ordered a nationwide Internet shutdown. The Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) instructed mobile network operators to suspend public Internet access, effective 18:00 local time (15:00 UTC) on January 13. The UCC reportedly defended the shutdown as necessary to "curb misinformation, disinformation, electoral fraud and related risks." Domestic traffic at the Uganda Internet Exchange Point (UIXP) dropped from approximately 72 Gbps to 1 Gbps as a result of the action taken.Similarly, Cloudflare data shows a near-complete loss of traffic from Uganda coincident with the start of the shutdown, with traffic remaining effectively at zero through 23:00 local time (20:00 UTC) on January 17, when Internet connectivity was partially restored after incumbent President Yoweri Museveni was declared winner of his seventh term. Full Internet restoration was announced by the UCC on January 26, with mobile network operators MTN Uganda and Airtel Uganda both confirming on social media that restrictions had been lifted. The shutdown prompted lawsuits against UCC and the telecoms companies and drew criticism from digital rights organizations including CIPESA.Uganda also blocked Internet access during its 2021 election. Authorities had repeatedly promised this time would be different, stating as recently as January 5 that "claims suggesting otherwise are false, misleading." Iran Iranian citizens spent a large part of Q1 2026 offline, or with severely limited connectivity, due to two nationwide Internet shutdowns. The first began around 20:00 local time (16:30 UTC) on January 8, and we explored the impact seen over the first few days in our What we know about Iran’s Internet shutdown blog post. Traffic from Iran remained near zero until January 21, when a small amount of traffic returned, only to disappear a little over 24 hours later. A similar brief restoration also occurred on January 25, before traffic…
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