The Prague Post - Renewable energy in the dock in Spain after blackout

EUR -
AED 4.333338
AFN 82.488788
ALL 97.919392
AMD 452.497189
ANG 2.111652
AOA 1082.007258
ARS 1450.456918
AUD 1.792982
AWG 2.123897
AZN 2.02147
BAM 1.955788
BBD 2.375985
BDT 143.919106
BGN 1.956105
BHD 0.44478
BIF 3505.448513
BMD 1.179943
BND 1.498978
BOB 8.130949
BRL 6.404491
BSD 1.176793
BTN 100.814374
BWP 15.616903
BYN 3.850976
BYR 23126.87632
BZD 2.363685
CAD 1.603218
CDF 3404.135317
CHF 0.934108
CLF 0.028481
CLP 1092.933864
CNY 8.454762
CNH 8.450832
COP 4708.856208
CRC 594.496307
CUC 1.179943
CUP 31.268481
CVE 110.264315
CZK 24.661942
DJF 209.548698
DKK 7.461621
DOP 69.929566
DZD 153.021112
EGP 58.232132
ERN 17.69914
ETB 162.332791
FJD 2.634456
FKP 0.859862
GBP 0.864533
GEL 3.208952
GGP 0.859862
GHS 12.178924
GIP 0.859862
GMD 84.366183
GNF 10200.850173
GTQ 9.047944
GYD 246.188471
HKD 9.262379
HNL 30.754809
HRK 7.532281
HTG 154.447732
HUF 400.168706
IDR 19117.726115
ILS 3.978419
IMP 0.859862
INR 101.117488
IQD 1541.490423
IRR 49705.085054
ISK 142.796388
JEP 0.859862
JMD 188.118831
JOD 0.836568
JPY 169.379577
KES 152.342203
KGS 103.186229
KHR 4722.930631
KMF 493.215954
KPW 1061.93069
KRW 1598.851788
KWD 0.360024
KYD 0.980694
KZT 610.246209
LAK 25360.842441
LBP 105436.144957
LKR 352.937807
LRD 235.938534
LSL 20.788071
LTL 3.484064
LVL 0.713735
LYD 6.336961
MAD 10.578034
MDL 19.774877
MGA 5179.967818
MKD 61.514191
MMK 2476.982156
MNT 4227.965591
MOP 9.514841
MRU 46.74571
MUR 52.826342
MVR 18.159741
MWK 2040.587322
MXN 22.160151
MYR 4.979302
MZN 75.468973
NAD 20.788071
NGN 1804.012516
NIO 43.299364
NOK 11.874849
NPR 161.302998
NZD 1.937879
OMR 0.45363
PAB 1.176693
PEN 4.190974
PGK 4.856929
PHP 66.649052
PKR 335.665815
PLN 4.263436
PYG 9385.941688
QAR 4.290273
RON 5.062664
RSD 117.131258
RUB 93.126194
RWF 1690.389498
SAR 4.425104
SBD 9.837093
SCR 16.600756
SDG 708.560496
SEK 11.232145
SGD 1.501855
SHP 0.92725
SLE 26.48955
SLL 24742.812129
SOS 672.495822
SRD 44.064985
STD 24422.430961
SVC 10.296936
SYP 15341.454619
SZL 20.783871
THB 38.182569
TJS 11.508529
TMT 4.141599
TND 3.425779
TOP 2.763547
TRY 47.08113
TTD 7.97995
TWD 34.20075
TZS 3105.065121
UAH 49.134895
UGX 4220.973776
USD 1.179943
UYU 46.559711
UZS 14916.907326
VES 129.172456
VND 30879.099658
VUV 140.679661
WST 3.224778
XAF 655.952925
XAG 0.032415
XAU 0.000353
XCD 3.188854
XDR 0.815795
XOF 655.952925
XPF 119.331742
YER 285.723507
ZAR 20.724277
ZMK 10620.902842
ZMW 28.273824
ZWL 379.941058
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Renewable energy in the dock in Spain after blackout
Renewable energy in the dock in Spain after blackout / Photo: CESAR MANSO - AFP

Renewable energy in the dock in Spain after blackout

Fierce debate raged in Spain on Wednesday over the role its reliance on renewable energy may have had in this week's blackout which disrupted millions of lives, though officials sought to downplay any potential link.

Text size:

"The lack of nuclear power stations and the 'boom' in renewables have brought the electricity grid to its knees," conservative newspaper ABC headlined on its front page.

Rival daily El Mundo wrote that "warnings about renewables over the last five years" had been "ignored".

Conservative opposition parties have also questioned Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's push to make Spain a green energy champion in the wake of Monday's power outage which halted trains, trapped people in elevators and plunged cities into darkness in the country and neighbouring Portugal.

Solar and wind power accounted for almost 40 percent of Spain's electricity last year, twice as much as in 2014, according to electricity operator REE.

By contrast the share of electricity generated by nuclear power fell to 20 percent in 2024, with the government aiming to phase out its atomic power plants by 2035.

Questions about the resilience of this mix began to be raised after it emerged that REE's parent company, Redeia, warned in its 2024 financial report that "the high penetration of renewable generation without the necessary technical capacity to deal adequately with disturbances" could "lead to production cuts".

These blackouts "could become severe, even leading to an imbalance between production and demand, which would significantly affect the electricity supply", it added in the report published in February.

- 'Worked perfectly' -

This message was echoed in a January report by Spain's competition watchdog CNMC which said the voltage on the electricity grid had sometimes "reached maximum values close to the authorised thresholds, and have even exceeded them at certain times".

After the blackout, experts questioned if an imbalance between electricity production and demand -- which is harder to correct without the right technology in a grid with significant wind and solar power generation -- could have led to the collapse of the system.

But Redeia president Beatriz Corredor -- a former Socialist lawmaker -- said renewable energy production "is secure", adding during an interview with news radio Cadena Ser on Wednesday it was "wrong" to link it to the blackout.

Redeia's 380-page annual financial report was merely listing a series of potential risks as required by law, she said.

Asked about the controversy, Ecological Transition Minister Sara Aagesen said Wednesday the cause of the blackout was still unknown and it was "imprudent to speculate".

"The system has worked perfectly well with similar demand and a comparable energy mix. Consequently, pointing the finger at renewables... does not seem appropriate," she added, calling Spain's network "robust".

- 'Ignorance' -

Sanchez on Tuesday defended his government's energy model and stressed that the cause of the outage was not yet known.

"Those who link this incident to the lack of nuclear power are frankly lying or demonstrating their ignorance," he told a news conference.

"Nuclear power plants, far from being a solution, have been a problem" during the blackout because "it was necessary to divert large amounts of energy to them to keep their cores stable", Sanchez said.

Spain's electricity network lost 15 gigawatts of electricity generation -- the equivalent of 60 percent of the country's electricity consumption at the time -- in just five seconds on Monday at around 12:33 pm (1033 GMT).

Spain's top criminal court said Tuesday it is investigating whether the blackout was "an act of computer sabotage" but REE has ruled out a cyberattack.

It has instead identified as a possible cause of the blackout two separate incidents just one and a half seconds apart, one which may have affected solar power production in southwest Spain.

But REE stressed it is "not possible to draw any conclusions" at this stage.

I.Horak--TPP