One year on: No responsibilities for 2025 blackout as sanctions mount and costs soar

One year after the April 28, 2025, blackout that paralyzed power for 36 million consumers across Spain, Portugal, and parts of France, Spain's CNMC has escalated sanctions against Red Eléctrica and utilities including Endesa, Iberdrola, and Naturgy. Reinforced grid operations have spiked electricity costs, yet no structural reforms or political accountability have emerged.

Exactly one year ago, on April 28, 2025, at 12:32, a cascade failure caused a total blackout impacting 30 million supply points in Spain, 6 million in Portugal, and southern France areas. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez blamed oscillations from southwest solar farms leading to a 15 GW drop, against only 5 GW synchronous generation.

Reports from government, REE, and Entso-e described multifactorial causes—overvoltages, premature disconnections, programming errors—without pinpointing blame. REE faulted utilities; firms countered with operator issues.

In response, CNMC launched 20 proceedings on April 17, 2026 (one very serious against REE), followed by 35 more last week targeting similar voltage control failures on other dates (detailed in prior coverage). Not all tie directly to the blackout, but they stem from the probe.

To avert repeats, REE's 'reinforced operation' ramps up gas plants, ballooning costs: grid restrictions hit 3.9 billion euros in 2025 (up from 2.7B in 2024), gas at 54.58 €/MWh (from 34.67). A parliamentary commission now probes the incident amid calls for reforms, but none have materialized and no officials have resigned.

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Cuban workers repair power infrastructure in Nuevitas after nationwide blackout, with dark Havana skyline and microgrids in background.
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Cuba launches recovery after second nationwide blackout in a week

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Cuba has begun restoring power following a nationwide grid collapse on Saturday evening—the second total blackout in less than a week and third major outage this month—affecting around 10 million people after a major power plant in Nuevitas failed. Officials established microgrids for essential services amid chronic fuel shortages and grid unreliability.

Spain's CNMC announced on Friday 35 new sanction proceedings amid the probe into the April 28, 2025 blackout, though these concern different days or periods. Iberdrola faces 18, Endesa 13, and Almaraz nuclear plant one very serious infraction. The regulator states these facts do not attribute the blackout's cause, which was multifactorial.

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Spain's CNMC has opened a very serious sanction file, dated April 23, against Iberdrola España and Iberdrola Generación Nuclear for possible unauthorized production cuts during the April 28, 2025 blackout—the third such case amid 56 total files opened recently in the ongoing investigation.

Enel has filed a 119-page defense with Aneel challenging the process that could end its São Paulo concession contract. The Italian company claims the proceeding is null and its performance indicators exceed the national average.

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Mexico's National Center for Energy Control (CENACE) forecasts a historic peak of up to 54,000 megawatts in electricity demand during the hottest months from May to late summer, but with sufficient reserves to prevent blackouts. CENACE director Octavio Mota Palomino called it a 'tight summer, but without deficit.' Officials have taken preventive steps ahead of potential heat waves.

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