An increasing number of public figures are blaming a saturation of solar power and an over-reliance on renewable energy.
Minutes before the outage, Spain was running on 60.64% solar photovoltaic generation, with 12% wind and 11.6% nuclear.
However diversified and advanced Spain’s energy mix is, the national power collapse at 12:35 on Monday required an enormous effort to get Spain back up and running.
The initial focus was to get the northern and southern power generating regions working again, which grid operator Red Eléctrica said was key to “gradually re-energising the transmission grid as the generating units are connected”.
The risk lay in overloading the system by turning everything on at the same time and triggering another massive outage.
So everything had to be carefully phased for what experts call a “black start” working out as a success.
The initial focus was on hydro-electric plants, in particular pumped-storage plants with reservoirs full at this time of year and able to produce electricity fast from a standing start.
Combined-cycle gas plants also played a significant part in repowering the grid, but four nuclear power reactors at Almaraz, Ascó and and Vandellós were automatically shut down by the outage, and three others were already offline anyway.
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Spain is only now beginning to count the cost. The CEOE bosses’ organisation has estimated a €1.6bn hit on the economy.
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Spain’s Guardia Civil police force said it had rescued 13,000 passengers trapped on trains.
Local police in Barcelona returned to the old ways, regulating traffic in the Plaça España because the lights were out.
Passengers on the Barcelona metro had to walk to safety using the torches on their mobile phones when their trains became stuck in tunnels.
Lovstuhagen@hilariouschaos.com 20 hours ago
From a France24 article on the complexity of this:
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