logo
Blackout chaos ending for Spain and Portugal

Blackout chaos ending for Spain and Portugal

RTHK29-04-2025
Blackout chaos ending for Spain and Portugal
Electricity supply to Restauradores Square in Lisbon is restored. Photo: AFP
Lights flickered back to life in Spain and Portugal on 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.
Electricity had been restored to nearly 90 percent of mainland Spain early on 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 the blackout. 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 on 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 said.
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 on 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 said.
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".
The huge power cut disrupted flights to and from Madrid, Barcelona and Lisbon, European air traffic organisation Eurocontrol said.
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. (AFP)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Yoon gets down and dirty to stymie interrogation
Yoon gets down and dirty to stymie interrogation

RTHK

time11 hours ago

  • RTHK

Yoon gets down and dirty to stymie interrogation

Yoon gets down and dirty to stymie interrogation Yoon Suk-yeol is said to have refused arrest by 'lying on the floor without wearing his prison-issued clothing'. File photo: Reuters South Korea's impeached former president Yoon Suk-yeol lay on his prison cell floor in his underwear to resist attempts to interrogate him, prosecutors said on Friday. Prosecutors obtained a fresh arrest warrant on Thursday to forcibly bring the former leader in for questioning over allegations of election tampering. However, they were "unable to do so due to his strong refusal", prosecutor Oh Jeong-hee said. "The suspect refused arrest while lying on the floor without wearing his prison-issued clothing," she said. "Due to concerns over safety incidents, physical force was withheld, and the execution of the warrant was temporarily suspended." Yoon was wearing "a sleeveless top and prison-issued briefs," prosecutors said, calling it the "most appropriate way" to describe his attire given the "serious nature of the situation". Prosecutors informed Yoon they would have to carry out physical force if necessary in the next attempt. Yoon was arrested after he tried to impose martial law on December 3, sending troops to parliament to prevent lawmakers from voting down his declaration and plunging the country into political turmoil. He faces a litany of charges, from insurrection to election tampering, but has refused multiple times to appear at his summons. Yoon's legal team said the prosecutors had shown a "disturbing disregard" for "basic human decency". "The special counsel turned what should have been a press briefing into a stage for personal humiliation," Yoon's lawyer Yoo Jeong-hwa said. "What kind of legal institution in a civilised country gives a real-time report and commentary to journalists on a detainee's clothing, especially in a cramped cell nearing 40 degrees [Celsius]?" Yoon's lawyers said the former president suffers from "several underlying conditions that pose significant challenges to maintaining his health", making it difficult for him to fully cooperate with the investigation. South Korea's justice minister told a parliamentary hearing that it was "frankly embarrassing for a former president to behave that way". "He had been wearing a short-sleeved top and trousers, but reportedly removed his prison uniform when the special counsel team attempted to enforce the arrest warrant, only to put it back on immediately after they left," Jung Sung-ho said. "We will ensure he is treated with appropriate dignity, without raising any suspicion of preferential treatment, in light of his former position," he added. (AFP)

Taiwan vows to seek lower tariff after Trump's ‘temporary' 20% levy
Taiwan vows to seek lower tariff after Trump's ‘temporary' 20% levy

HKFP

time13 hours ago

  • HKFP

Taiwan vows to seek lower tariff after Trump's ‘temporary' 20% levy

Taiwan vowed on Friday to seek a lower tariff after Donald Trump imposed a 'temporary' 20 percent levy on its shipments to the United States as part of his trade war. The US president's announcement was part of a sweep of measures — reaching 41 percent — against dozens of global partners as they scrambled for deals with Washington to avert the painful tolls. The figure is down from the 32 percent toll imposed in his April 2 'Liberation Day', since when Taipei and Washington have held four rounds of face-to-face talks and multiple video conferences to resolve the issue. On Friday Taiwan President Lai Ching-te said on Facebook they were still working to strike an agreement 'The US has announced a temporary 20 percent tariff for Taiwan, with the possibility of further reductions should an agreement be reached,' he wrote. 'The government will continue to strive for a reasonable tariff rate and complete the final stages of the tariff negotiations.' While Trump had set Friday as the deadline for agreements to be made, he delayed it until the end of next week. No timeline was given for Taiwan, which could mean the island was caught in the middle of US-China trade negotiations, said Alicia Garcia-Herrero, chief economist for Asia Pacific at Natixis. Washington and Beijing held two days of talks this week aimed at reaching a deal to extend a truce in their trade war and prevent the reimposition of sky-high tariffs on August 12. 'The conditions on Taiwan might be relevant for China, imagine export controls,' Garcia-Herrero told AFP. After US tech giant Nvidia announced it will resume sales of its H20 AI chips to China, Garcia-Herrero said 'there could be other stuff that China needs from Taiwan that the US can offer'. 'This is the ceiling' Taiwan is a global powerhouse in chip manufacturing, with more than half the world's semiconductors and nearly all of the high-end ones made there. The owner of a Taiwanese machinery exporter to the United States said he was worried that lower tariff rates on Japan and South Korea — 15 percent — would advantage his competitors there. He told AFP the recent appreciation in the Taiwan dollar against the greenback had also 'put a lot of pressure on us, creating a double whammy'. The uncertainty over tariffs was hurting US sales, said textile producer Eddie Wang, with clients 'feeling overwhelmed' and reluctant to place orders. Soaring demand for AI-related technology has fuelled Taiwan's trade surplus with the United States — and put it in Trump's crosshairs. Around 60 percent of Taiwan's exports to the United States are information and communications technology, which includes chips. In a bid to avoid the tariffs, Taipei has pledged to increase investment in the United States, buy more of its energy and increase its own defence spending. Economist Sun Ming-te said the 20 percent levy was 'probably the best outcome Taiwan can achieve with the US under the current conditions.' 'This is the ceiling, and it can go lower in the future,' Sun, from the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research, told AFP.

Trump to build US$200m ballroom at White House
Trump to build US$200m ballroom at White House

RTHK

time17 hours ago

  • RTHK

Trump to build US$200m ballroom at White House

Trump to build US$200m ballroom at White House White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt holds up an artist's conception of the US$200 million White House ballroom to be built. Photo: Reuters US President Donald Trump, who is remodelling the White House to his tastes, will build a massive ballroom for hosting official receptions, one of the largest projects at the executive mansion in over a century. Trump himself, and unspecified donors, will foot the bill for the US$200 million project, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Thursday. "For 150 years, presidents, administrations and White House staff have longed for a large event space on the White House complex," she said. "There's never been a president that was good at ballrooms," the 79-year-old president and former real estate developer said of the latest bid to leave his mark on the White House. "I'm good at building things, and we'll get it built quickly and on time. It'll be beautiful," said Trump, assuring that the character of the original building would be preserved. The new structure will span over 8,000 square meters and have space to seat 650 people, according to Leavitt. Work on the ballroom – one of Trump's long-time ambitions – will begin in September and is expected to be completed "well before" the end of his second term in January 2029, she said. The hope is it will host grand state dinners, given in honour of foreign heads of state visiting Washington. Until now, these were generally done by erecting a huge tent on the White House grounds. A model of the ballroom presented by the government shows it will be a white building with tall windows. Its columns and front look reminiscent of the main White House building. The ballroom building will replace the East Wing, which usually houses the offices of the US first lady. Trump, who does not shy away from the gaudy, has also redone the Oval Office to splash the room in gold – from the stars surrounding the presidential seal on the ceiling, to the gold statues on the fireplace, to the mantel itself. The project is shaping up to be one of the most significant to break ground at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue since renovation and expansion works undertaken by president Theodore Roosevelt at the start of the 20th century. President Harry Truman also oversaw notable construction work between 1948 and 1952, but did so without changing the external structure. Trump has said for some time that he wants to build a White House ballroom inspired by his own properties. On Thursday, he praised the newly built, lavish ballroom – named after himself – at his Turnberry golf resort in Scotland, one of dozens of properties owned by the Trump family. (AFP)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store