Mayor Bill de Blasio on Monday night said the city is prepared for more power outages as severe thunderstorms rolled through the tri-state area.

“With severe storms tonight, we are mobilized in case even more New Yorkers lose power,” de Blasio said in a statement.

“After two massive outages in eight days, New Yorkers are out of patience and have lost trust in Con Ed’s ability to provide a basic service.”

Increased resources included the deployment of 200 NYPD officers to patrol the streets and help direct traffic in parts of southeast Brooklyn still reeling from Sunday’s blackout.

The city will also have a number of light towers on hand in case of more blackouts, and a Red Cross shelter will remain open overnight in Bensonhurst.

Sunday night, amid scattered outages during a scorching heat wave, Con Edison shut off power to 30,000 customers in Brooklyn for repairs and preventive action.

By Monday morning, 13,000 customers in Brooklyn still remained without power, prompting de Blasio to blast the utility company.

“I’m not getting any real answers and they have let New Yorkers down once again,” Hizzoner said.

“I am extremely disappointed with Con Ed. They have been giving us consistently inconsistent information over the last days,” he added.

Sunday’s blackouts came a week after a major power outage in Manhattan that temporarily left 73,000 customers in the dark.