CFE Emergency Response Group monitors winter storm Fern's extreme cold, snow, and rain threatening power supply in Mexico from a control room.
CFE Emergency Response Group monitors winter storm Fern's extreme cold, snow, and rain threatening power supply in Mexico from a control room.
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Cfe activates emergency group for winter storm fern

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The Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) installed its Emergency Response Steering Group in permanent session to monitor the third winter storm 'Fern', which will affect northern and central Mexico from January 23 to 25, 2026, with extreme cold, snowfalls, and rains. The action aims to ensure electricity supply amid potential disruptions in natural gas imports from the United States. As of noon on January 23, no impacts have been reported.

The third winter storm of the season, known as 'Fern', will interact with Cold Front 31 and an arctic air mass, creating adverse weather conditions in Mexico from Friday, January 23, to Sunday, January 25, 2026. According to the National Meteorological Service (SMN), minimum temperatures of -20 to -15 degrees Celsius are expected in the mountainous areas of Chihuahua, snowfalls in the sierras of Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, Sinaloa, and Durango, and intense rains in Durango and Veracruz. Wind gusts up to 100 km/h will affect Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, and Zacatecas, with possible whirlwind formation in Coahuila. On Sunday, an intense 'Norte' will raise waves to 4 meters in Tamaulipas and Veracruz, and snow could descend to peaks like Nevado de Colima, Cofre de Perote, and Pico de Orizaba.

Faced with this phenomenon, which will first hit Texas, Oklahoma, and Mississippi in the United States—where natural gas futures have already risen up to 75%—the CFE, led by Emilia Calleja, activated the Emergency Response Steering Group. This group, in permanent session, monitors meteorological developments and coordinates operations to prevent disruptions in electricity supply, as over 60% of energy is generated with natural gas, 70% of which is imported from the U.S., mainly from Texas.

The CFE has 28,000 MW of available capacity without natural gas, using conventional thermal plants (fuel oil, diesel), coal-fired plants, and clean energies like wind, photovoltaic, and hydroelectric. It also has two LNG regasification terminals with capacity for 350,000 cubic meters, over 800 electricians, 210 cranes, 333 light vehicles, and 37 emergency plants. Strategic Operation Centers were set up in the Baja California, Norte, Golfo Norte, Golfo Centro divisions, and national offices.

President Claudia Sheinbaum mentioned in her January 23 conference that the CFE will issue recommendations and a contingency plan. "Since this winter front was announced in Texas and northern Mexico, a series of contingencies have been taken," she said. Civil Protection recommended dressing in layers, insulating pipes, ventilating heaters, and reducing speed on icy roads. The number 071 is available for reports. They recall the 2021 impact, when a polar vortex caused CFE losses of 106.3 billion pesos due to gas shortages, but experts like Adrián Calcaneo note better preparation with 'winter packages' in Texas.

As of 12:00 on January 23, there are no critical impacts.

사람들이 말하는 것

Reactions on X to CFE's activation of the Emergency Response Steering Group for winter storm Fern are predominantly neutral and informative, featuring official announcements from CFE, SENER, and executives emphasizing preparedness with over 800 workers, equipment, and reserves deployed, and no disruptions reported yet. News outlets echo these updates, reflecting confidence in electricity supply amid cold weather risks.

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Dramatic photorealistic scene of heavy rain, strong winds, and mountain snow from winter storm and cold front 40 in northern Mexico.
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Fourth Winter Storm and Cold Front 40 Bring Rains, Winds to Northern Mexico

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Following cold front 39's impacts earlier in March, the fourth winter storm and cold front number 40 will bring heavy rains, strong winds, and low temperatures to northwest and northern Mexico on Monday, March 9, according to the National Meteorological Service. Showers are expected in the center and south of the country, with possible snow in mountainous areas. In contrast, a heat wave persists in the south with temperatures up to 45 degrees Celsius.

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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The National Meteorological Service reported that cold front number 38 will affect various regions of the country with low temperatures and frosts starting March 3, 2026. Meanwhile, a heat wave will persist in southern states with highs up to 45°C. Rains are expected in more than 20 states, signaling the gradual end of the extreme heat.

Energy Secretary Luz Elena González Escobar announced a plan to increase natural gas production and cut import dependency, alongside President Claudia Sheinbaum. The initiative features a technical committee for sustainable practices and speeds up renewables to 38% by 2030.

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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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