HAVANA — It's almost noon in Havana when a handful of tourists tumble out of a small yellow bus and rush toward a row of shiny classic cars, cameras in hand.
Nearby, under the shade of a beach almond tree, a group of drivers jump to their feet, some hoping for their first customer of the day.
But the tourists take a couple of quick selfies in front of brightly colored cars ranging from a 1950 Pontiac to a 1960 Buick and walk away.
''This is grim,'' said Reymundo Aldama, who drives a bubblegum pink 1957 convertible Ford Fairlane. ''We're waiting for them to come, we're waiting for work.''
Tourism in Cuba is plummeting at a time when the island desperately needs that revenue, with the number of visitors dropping by more than half since 2018. For almost two decades, a steady stream of visitors sparked a boom in tourism, only for the COVID-19 pandemic and severe blackouts to hit, coupled with increased U.S. sanctions.
Now, Cubans whose livelihood depends on tourism are among those suffering the most as the island braces for what experts warn could be a catastrophic economic crisis following a disruption in oil shipments from Venezuela after the U.S. attacked the South American country and arrested its president.
The situation is already acute for Rosbel Figueredo Ricardo, 30, who sells a popular Cuban street food known as ''chivirico,'' fried flour chips sprinkled with sugar.
He used to load 150 bags of chips every morning onto a plastic tray he balances on his shoulder and sell out by late afternoon. Nowadays, he only loads 50 bags a day, works from dawn until nighttime and sometimes doesn't sell a single bag.