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Spain’s grid operator blames power plants for blackout, disputes miscalculation

Spain’s grid operator blames power plants for blackout, disputes miscalculation

A view shows Santa Llogaia electrical sub-station connected to the interconnection grid between France and Spain that tripped after a sudden, large drop in power supply and caused the major blackout in the Iberian Peninsula, in the village of Santa Llogaia d'Alguema, near Figueres, Spain April 29, 2025. REUTERS/Bruna Casas/File Photo

Spanish grid operator Redeia blamed power plants for the massive blackout that affected the Iberian peninsula in April, as it disputed a government report that said its failure to calculate the correct energy mix was a key factor.

While agreeing that a surge in voltage was the immediate cause of the outage, REE-owner Redeia blamed it on some conventional power plants – thermal power plants using coal, gas and nuclear – for failing to help maintain an appropriate voltage.

“Based on our calculation, there were enough voltage control capabilities planned” by Redeia, operations chief Concha Sanchez told a news briefing on Wednesday.

“Had conventional power plants done their job in controlling the voltage there would have been no blackout,” she said.

Redeia, which is partly state-owned, also discovered anomalies in the disconnection of power plants in the run-up to the April 28 outage, even though voltage in the system was within legal limits, Sanchez said.

A combined-cycle plant that was supposed to provide stability to the system disconnected in the first seconds of the blackout when it should not have, while there was also an anomalous growth in demand from the transport network, she said.

Aelec, which represents Spain’s main electricity companies including Iberdrola and Endesa, said on Wednesday that “claiming everything was done correctly” while blaming some power plants for the blackout was damaging to the sector’s reputation. “The operator failed to safely cover all the system’s needs,” the lobby added.

Redeia on Wednesday released its own full report on the causes of the outage, a day after the Spanish government published its findings.

The government’s report released on Tuesday said Redeia’s miscalculation was one of the factors hindering the grid’s ability to cope with a surge in voltage that led to the outage that caused gridlock in cities across the Iberian peninsula and left tens of thousands stranded on trains overnight or stuck in lifts.

But Sanchez said the system was in “absolutely normal conditions” at noon just before the blackout and that adding another gas plant to the system to absorb additional voltage would have made no difference.

Redeia Chair Beatriz Corredor told the same news briefing she had absolute faith in the company’s calculations and that the operator had complied with all procedures and rules.

“Red Electrica didn’t breach any procedure and has acted diligently,” Chief Executive Roberto Garcia Merino said at the briefing, adding that as a result he did not expect the company to face any claims.

(Reporting by Pietro Lombardi)

 

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