Slovenia's meteorology agency ARSO declared a high alert over most of the country, urging citizens to stay at home and warning the weather conditions yesterday afternoon and overnight could still pose a serious threat to people and their properties.
In the Postojna area, some 40 kilometres (24 miles) south of the capital Ljubljana, power lines collapsed under the weight of ice and snow or falling trees and could not be repaired due to the continuing bad weather.
"This is a large-scale natural disaster," Prime Minister Alenka Bratusek said after visiting the Postojna area on yesterday, adding her government would ask the European Union's assistance in providing a large number of power generators needed to bridge the power shortage.
Power cuts were also reported in some areas of Ljubljana, Celje and Maribor, leaving around 120,000 households or some 250,000 citizens in the country of two million people without electricity, private POP tv reported quoting electricity distribution sources.
During the day, the Defence Ministry said the army had deployed 100 soldiers to assist the civil defence units in the Postojna region and added power generators from Austria, Germany and the Czech Republic were on their way and would be distributed to the most critical areas.
Due to the extraordinary weather conditions, around 75 percent of kindergartens, schools and high schools in Slovenia will remain closed tomorrow, the Education Ministry said.