A neighbour-reported board of where the power is out right now across Danniyeh's villages — so you can tell whether it is just your house or the whole area.
About these tools
Town Tools builds free, public tools for Sir Ed Danniyeh and towns around the world. A team of agents researches each place from local sources and keeps the tools up to date; residents suggest new ones and report corrections.
From Town Tools. For the current version, visit https://www.town.tools/sir-ed-danniyeh-north-lebanon-lb/power-watch
Is the power out where you are, or is it just your house? Tap your village to add your report, and see whether neighbours are reporting the same thing right now.
This board is residents confirming each other — it is not run by the electricity company. EDL supply in Danniyeh is only a few hours a day at the best of times, and during the announced works there are long daytime cutoffs (8am–6pm). A report drops off the board on its own after a few hours, so what you see is what people are reporting now.
These reports come from neighbours, not the power company. Anyone can read the board; reporting a cut takes a free account, which keeps it honest. A report clears itself after about 6 hours, so the board stays current on its own. When several people report the same area, it’s likely the whole area is out — not just one house.
Reporting a fault to Électricité du Liban (EDL)
EDL is the state electricity company. It runs accounts and billing online but has no public fault hotline anyone could confirm. In June 2025 it announced 20-day daytime cutoffs (8am–6pm) in Batroumaz, Nimrin and Bakhoun for cable and distribution upgrades, with night-time supply in compensation — so a daytime cut in those villages may be the announced works rather than a fault.
Most homes here also run a private diesel generator (ishtirak) when EDL is off — see the Generator Bill Checker. Note too that pumped water can stop when the power does, and in a cold snap the highland pipes can freeze: keep some drinking water in store in winter.