P ower was almost fully restored to Spain and Portugal yesterday although many questions remained about what caused one of Europe’s most severe blackouts that grounded flights, paralyzed metro systems, disrupted mobile communications and shut down ATMs across the Iberian Peninsula. By 7 a.m.
, more than 99% of energy demand in Spain had been restored, the country’s electricity operator Red Eléctrica said. Portuguese grid operator REN said yesterday all of the 89 power substations were back online since late last night and power had been restored to all 6.4 million customers.
By yesterday morning, life was returning to normal: schools and offices reopened in Spain, traffic eased along the capital’s main arteries and public transport restarted after significant delays. Spanish authorities did not provide new explanations for what caused the blackout, one of the most serious to ever take place in Europe. In a televised address yesterday [Macau time], Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said the power grid for the Southern European nation of 49 million people lost 15 gigawatts — equivalent to 60% of its national demand — in just five seconds.
“We have never had a complete collapse of the system,” Sánchez said. Authorities were still investigating what happened yesterday. Such widespread electric failure has little precedent on the Iberian Peninsula or in Europe.
Yesterday, Spain’s meteorological agency AEMET said that it had not detected any “unusual meteorological or atmospheric phenomena” on Monday, and no sudden temperature fluctuations were recorded at their weather stations. Portugal’s National Cybersecurity Center yesterday [Macau time] threw cold water on feverish speculation about foul play, saying there was no sign that the outage resulted from a cyber attack. European Council President Antonio Costa also said there were “no indications of any cyber attack” Monday afternoon.
Teresa Ribera, an executive vice president of the European Commission, also ruled out sabotage. Nonetheless, the outage “is one of the most serious episodes recorded in Europe in recent times,” she said. At Spain’s largest train stations, droves of travelers waited Tuesday morning to board trains, or to rebook tickets for journeys that were canceled or disrupted on Monday and return home.
At Atocha station in Madrid, hundreds of people stood near screens waiting for updates. Many had spent the night at the station, wrapped in blankets provided by the Red Cross around 1 a.m.
Tuesday morning for those who had to wait overnight thanks to canceled trains. Similar scenes played out at Barcelona’s Sants station. The Madrid Open tennis tournament being held this week was still affected by the power outage yesterday after its cancellation the previous day.
Tournament organizers delayed opening its doors. By 11 a.m.
Tuesday, service on Madrid’s metro system was fully restored. In Barcelona, the system was operating normally but commuter trains were suspended due to “electrical instability,” the company that runs the service, Rodalies Catalunya, said on X. In some parts of the country, commuter and mid-distance services were still suspended or running at reduced capacity.
Emergency workers in Spain said they had rescued some 35,000 passengers on Monday stranded along railways and underground, with the blackout turning sports centers, train stations and airports into makeshift overnight refuges. SUMAN NAISHADHAM, MADRID, MDT/AP.
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Portugal, Spain’s power is almost fully restored, but the blackout’s cause remains a mystery

Power was almost fully restored to Spain and Portugal yesterday although many questions remained about what caused one of Europe’s most severe blackouts that grounded flights, paralyzed metro systems, disrupted mobile communications and shut down ATMs across the Iberian Peninsula. By 7 a.m., more than 99% of energy demand in Spain had been restored, the [...]The post Portugal, Spain’s power is almost fully restored, but the blackout’s cause remains a mystery appeared first on MACAU DAILY TIMES 澳門每日時報.