Zürcher Nachrichten - Spain and Portugal work to restore power after massive blackout

EUR -
AED 4.108088
AFN 78.847591
ALL 98.264846
AMD 433.946887
ANG 2.001665
AOA 1025.618398
ARS 1265.519883
AUD 1.738504
AWG 2.013209
AZN 1.897899
BAM 1.950106
BBD 2.261138
BDT 136.063334
BGN 1.955943
BHD 0.42159
BIF 3282.648936
BMD 1.118449
BND 1.452585
BOB 7.738613
BRL 6.292062
BSD 1.11985
BTN 95.435936
BWP 15.204877
BYN 3.664865
BYR 21921.607883
BZD 2.249472
CAD 1.562502
CDF 3209.949582
CHF 0.941284
CLF 0.027437
CLP 1052.740903
CNY 8.059937
CNH 8.064367
COP 4701.401976
CRC 568.749551
CUC 1.118449
CUP 29.638909
CVE 109.943008
CZK 24.934042
DJF 198.770873
DKK 7.461187
DOP 65.820383
DZD 149.154149
EGP 56.349945
ERN 16.776741
ETB 148.691965
FJD 2.53737
FKP 0.842357
GBP 0.842562
GEL 3.064645
GGP 0.842357
GHS 13.92501
GIP 0.842357
GMD 81.084886
GNF 9681.297858
GTQ 8.603572
GYD 234.290116
HKD 8.732014
HNL 29.124484
HRK 7.53265
HTG 146.533466
HUF 403.039957
IDR 18536.061604
ILS 3.962907
IMP 0.842357
INR 95.592869
IQD 1467.029723
IRR 47100.716049
ISK 145.096078
JEP 0.842357
JMD 178.738125
JOD 0.793314
JPY 164.0782
KES 144.841672
KGS 97.808316
KHR 4496.166646
KMF 492.537115
KPW 1006.632948
KRW 1569.070368
KWD 0.343979
KYD 0.933192
KZT 568.928511
LAK 24216.643341
LBP 100339.52277
LKR 334.325341
LRD 223.970063
LSL 20.420746
LTL 3.30249
LVL 0.676539
LYD 6.177962
MAD 10.395355
MDL 19.530325
MGA 5005.251547
MKD 61.525791
MMK 2348.053482
MNT 4001.416621
MOP 9.002276
MRU 44.467767
MUR 51.482548
MVR 17.279827
MWK 1941.761054
MXN 21.669828
MYR 4.797706
MZN 71.479805
NAD 20.421656
NGN 1792.270573
NIO 41.209861
NOK 11.608162
NPR 152.705864
NZD 1.894122
OMR 0.430576
PAB 1.1198
PEN 4.104733
PGK 4.652375
PHP 62.407234
PKR 315.373591
PLN 4.232699
PYG 8940.894618
QAR 4.083078
RON 5.104492
RSD 116.870854
RUB 89.894952
RWF 1604.144946
SAR 4.195454
SBD 9.351747
SCR 15.900204
SDG 671.629641
SEK 10.900856
SGD 1.454862
SHP 0.878926
SLE 25.444392
SLL 23453.32455
SOS 640.042666
SRD 40.712117
STD 23149.644062
SVC 9.798566
SYP 14541.748012
SZL 20.409678
THB 37.400575
TJS 11.607217
TMT 3.920165
TND 3.379134
TOP 2.619526
TRY 43.365188
TTD 7.580004
TWD 33.944153
TZS 3019.176959
UAH 46.491854
UGX 4091.055048
USD 1.118449
UYU 46.783403
UZS 14485.705031
VES 103.955393
VND 29001.392469
VUV 134.356846
WST 3.118873
XAF 654.058992
XAG 0.034713
XAU 0.000352
XCD 3.022665
XDR 0.821655
XOF 654.04733
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.405634
ZAR 20.426521
ZMK 10067.392492
ZMW 29.816742
ZWL 360.140245
  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    63.81

    +1.27%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    22.26

    -0.58%

  • CMSC

    -0.0950

    21.965

    -0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    36.22

    -0.36%

  • SCS

    -0.1700

    10.54

    -1.61%

  • BTI

    -0.1400

    40.55

    -0.35%

  • NGG

    -0.1000

    67.43

    -0.15%

  • RIO

    -0.2400

    62.03

    -0.39%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    12.77

    -0.86%

  • BP

    -0.2000

    30.36

    -0.66%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    10.53

    -1.61%

  • BCC

    -2.9700

    90.74

    -3.27%

  • RELX

    0.6600

    53.06

    +1.24%

  • AZN

    -1.4900

    66.23

    -2.25%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    9.04

    -0.22%

  • BCE

    -0.7200

    21.26

    -3.39%

Spain and Portugal work to restore power after massive blackout
Spain and Portugal work to restore power after massive blackout / Photo: Thomas COEX - AFP

Spain and Portugal work to restore power after massive blackout

Lights flickered back to life in Spain and Portugal early Tuesday after a massive blackout hit the Iberian peninsula stranding passengers in trains and hundreds of elevators while millions saw phone and internet coverage die.

Text size:

More than 80 percent of Spain's national electricity supply had been restored by early Tuesday, the REE power operator said. Lights came on again in Madrid and in Portugal's capital.

Barely a corner of the peninsula, which has a joint population of almost 60 million people, escaped. But no firm cause for the shutdown has yet emerged, though wild rumours spread on messaging networks about cyber attacks.

Portuguese Prime Minister Luis Montenegro said the source of the outage was "probably in Spain". Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said "all the potential causes" were being analysed and warned the public "not to speculate" because of the risk of "misinformation".

Sanchez said about 15 gigawatts of electricity, more than half of the power being consumed at the time, "suddenly disappeared" in about five seconds.

Sanchez was unable to say when power would be completely restored in Spain and warned that some workers would have to stay home Tuesday. Montenegro said Portugal's power would be back "within hours".

Power was restored overnight to around 6.2 million households in Portugal out of 6.5 million, according to the national electricity grid operator.

The outage rippled briefly into southwest France while Morocco saw disruption to some internet providers and airport check-in systems.

People were "stunned", according to Carlos Candori, a 19-year-old construction worker who had to exit the paralysed Madrid metro system. "This has never happened in Spain".

"There's no (phone) coverage, I can't call my family, my parents, nothing: I can't even go to work," he told AFP.

- Cash queues -

In Madrid and cities across Spain and Portugal, panicked customers rushed to withdraw cash from banks, and streets filled with crowds floundering for a phone signal. Long lines formed for taxis and buses.

With stop lights knocked out, police struggled to keep densely congested traffic moving and authorities urged motorists to stay home.

In Madrid alone 286 rescue operations were carried out to free people trapped in lifts, regional authorities said.

Trains were halted across the country and late Monday, the transport minister said there were still 11 trains with stranded passengers who needed help.

Railway stations in Madrid, Barcelona, Bilbao, Valencia, Seville and four other major cities were to be kept open all night so that stranded passengers could sleep there.

Spain's nuclear power plants automatically went offline as a safety precaution, with diesel generators maintaining them in a "safe condition", the Spanish Nuclear Safety Council (CSN) said.

- 'Serious disruption' -

Sanchez said the blackout, which hit just after midday, caused "serious disruption" for millions and "economic losses in businesses, in companies, in industries".

The European Commission said it was in contact with Spain and Portugal over the crisis. European Council President Antonio Costa said on X: "There are no indications of any cyberattack".

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky offered support in a call to Sanchez, noting his country had become specialised in such emergencies after three years of Russia attacking its electrical grid.

"No matter what happens, we are always ready to assist and support our friends," he said on X.

The huge power cut disrupted flights to and from Madrid, Barcelona and Lisbon, European air traffic organisation Eurocontrol said.

- France affected -

Transport chaos also gripped Spain's second city, Barcelona, where locals and tourists alike flooded the streets in an attempt to find out what had happened.

Student Laia Montserrat left school when the lights went out.

"As the internet wasn't coming back, they told us to go home... (but) there weren't trains either," she told AFP. "Now we don't know what to do."

The internet activity monitoring site Netblocks told AFP the blackout caused a "loss of much of the country's digital infrastructure". It said web connections plunged to just 17 percent of normal usage.

Spain's El Pais newspaper reported that hospitals used back-up generators to keep critical wards going, but some units were left without power.

Massive blackouts have affected other countries around the world in recent years.

 

In Europe, in November 2006, 10 million people were left without power for an hour in France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy and Spain. That was caused by a failure in Germany's grid.

burs/giv/tc/mtp

O.Pereira--NZN