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Net zero, cyber attack or freak weather? Urgent probe after Spain & Portugal left in chaos by Europe’s biggest blackout

Published on April 29, 2025 at 08:55 AM

SPAIN and Portugal plunged into chaos after Europe’s biggest-ever blackout cut power to tens of millions – and now experts are warning that net zero may be partly to blame.

A huge reliance on solar and wind left both nations dangerously exposed, analysts said, as .

A worker assists a customer with a torch at a supermarket during a power outage which hit large parts of Spain, in Barcelona, Spain April 28, 2025. REUTERS/Nacho Doce TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
A worker assists a customer with a torch at a supermarket during a power outage which hit large parts of Spain
Silhouetted figures at a closed metro station gate during a power outage.
Metro closing the gates in Barcelona
Passengers sitting on the floor of an airport during a widespread power outage.
Travellers stranded at Lisbon airport during the electricity shutdown
Passengers sitting on the floor of a train station during a power outage.
People sit outside Joaquin Sorolla train station in Valencia after services were cancelled

The mass outage , fuelled panic buying, and left thousands of Brits stranded as and links across the Iberian peninsula ground to a halt.

The exact cause of , which began around 10.33am UK time, remains unclear.

But energy specialists say the green shift to solar and wind made the grid in and far less stable – leaving it unable to cope when disaster struck.

At the time of the blackout, was running on over 64% solar and wind, while gas made up just 6% of the power mix,The Telegraphreports.

Unlike fuels, renewables do not generate “inertia”; – the stabilising energy needed to absorb shocks in the grid.

Britain’s National Energy Systems Operator described inertia as being like “the shock absorbers in your car’s suspension, which dampen the effect of a sudden bump in the road and keep your car stable and moving forward.”;

Kathryn Porter, an independent energy analyst, explained: “In a low-inertia environment the frequency can change much faster.

“If you have had a significant grid fault in one area, or a cyber attack, or whatever it may be, the grid operators therefore have less time to react.

“That can lead to cascading failures if you cannot get it under control quickly.”;

Former UK grid boss Duncan Burt added: “If you have got a very high solar day then your grid is less stable, unless you’ve taken actions to mitigate that.”;

Spain has made huge strides towards net zero – moving from dominating 80% of power generation two decades ago to renewables now making up more than half.

But experts warn that while solar and wind are clean, they don’t provide the same grid “shock absorbers”; as traditional power plants.

Solar and wind lack the “inertia”; provided by big spinning turbines, meaning they can’t react fast enough when things go wrong.

Richard Tice, Reform UK’s deputy leader, said: “This should be seen as a wake-up call to the eco-zealots...

“Wind and solar outputs by contrast, vary hugely over long and short periods so they add risk to the system.”;

The European of Auditors had already warned earlier this month that the boom in renewables made balancing electricity systems across much harder.

Under Ed Milliband’s plans, Britain is racing to decarbonise its energy system by 2030 – a goal critics say now looks even riskier.

Cyber attack or extreme weather?

While the ‘s cyber security wing ruled out a hack for now – blaming a technical or cable fault – some aren’t so sure.

Juanma Moreno, president of Andalusia’s regional government, of the disruption and claimed that everything pointed towards a deliberate plot.

He added that hospitals would only be able to rely on their generators for 24 hours.

There were also fears that a “Russian cyberattack”; is behind the chaos, following previous similar plots againstEurope.

Bartender at a bar with customers.
This bar in Toledo, central Spain, soldiered on through the outage
Large crowd of people waiting for taxis at an airport during a widespread power outage.
People queue for a taxi at Barajas Airport in Madrid during Monday’s blackout
Commuters leaving a subway station during a blackout.
Commuters leave a dark subway station in Madrid, Spain

There was speculation that Putin’s meddling was involved in thelast month, which depleted the whole airport of power for a day.

Meanwhile, ‘s grid operator REN suggested a “rare atmospheric phenomenon”; caused “anomalous oscillations”; due to extreme temperature variations – though experts noted the wasn’t particularly extreme at 22C.

Utility analyst Steve Loftus said: “The cynic in me wonders if there are people who don’t want to admit that it’s a renewables issue – if it was – because a lot of people are very invested in its success.”;

Slow recovery

By Monday night, – including Galicia, the Basque Country, and Catalonia.

But Spanish officials warned full normality could take days, with Portugal adding it could take up to a week to fully stabilise on their end.

Airports in , and were operating on emergency systems, and rail services across Spain and Portugal remained crippled.

As Britain watches on, experts are now urging a rethink before throwing everything behind renewables without safeguards.

Craig Dyke at Britain’s National Energy Systems Operator said: “We are monitoring the situation closely and are liaising with our counterparts in neighbouring European countries to offer any assistance that may be required.”;

A UK Government spokesperson insisted: “Our electricity network continues to operate as normal and there are no expected impacts on the UK.”;

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