Dramatic illustration of Aneel initiating caducity process against Enel amid São Paulo blackouts from storms.
Dramatic illustration of Aneel initiating caducity process against Enel amid São Paulo blackouts from storms.
Bilde generert av AI

Aneel opens caducity process against Enel in São Paulo

Bilde generert av AI

Brazil's National Electric Energy Agency (Aneel) decided on Tuesday (7) to open an administrative process to terminate the concession contract of distributor Enel in the São Paulo metropolitan region. The company has 30 days to defend itself before the agency issues an opinion to the Ministry of Mines and Energy, which has the final say. The action follows repeated blackouts caused by storms since late 2023.

Aneel's board approved unanimously the opening of the caducity procedure against Enel, the first time the agency has initiated such a process. Experts estimate that, if confirmed, the termination would require an initial indemnity of R$ 15 billion to the concessionaire, based on unamortized investments.

Governor Tarcísio de Freitas (Republicanos) and Mayor Ricardo Nunes (MDB) welcomed the decision. "Renewing Enel's contract would be an aggression to São Paulo's population," Tarcísio said, citing failures in energy connections and delays in projects like metro line 6. Nunes stated: "We are exhausted by Enel's inability to provide a decent service."

Enel responded with an official note, expressing full confidence in its legal and technical foundations. "The company will continue working to demonstrate full compliance with all contractual indicators," it declared, demanding due process and impartiality. The current contract runs until 2028, and Enel denies any definitive caducity recommendation by Aneel.

The blackouts affected millions: 2 million properties in 2024 and 4.4 million customers in 2025, blamed on weather events. Possible outcomes include intervention, judicial dispute, or agreement, with the federal government facing political pressure.

Hva folk sier

Discussions on X highlight celebration from São Paulo politicians over Aneel's decision to initiate caducity process against Enel due to repeated blackouts. Vereadores and a deputado federal praise the move, linking it to prior CPIs and emphasizing service failures. High-engagement news posts report the unanimous or majority vote. Sentiments are largely negative towards Enel with support for potential contract termination; no major defenses from Enel found.

Relaterte artikler

São Paulo leaders—Minister Silveira, Governor Freitas, and Mayor Nunes—unite at press conference to formalize Enel concession revocation request amid blackouts.
Bilde generert av AI

São Paulo Governments Unite to Accelerate Enel Concession Revocation

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI

Building on last week's state request for intervention amid blackouts, federal Minister Alexandre Silveira, Governor Tarcísio de Freitas, and Mayor Ricardo Nunes will formalize a caducidade request to Aneel by Wednesday, amid unified dissatisfaction with Enel's service failures.

Following the unified federal-state-municipal push for Enel concession review after December blackouts—as reported earlier—experts argue selling the distributor is simpler than unprecedented caducidade, amid Minister Silveira's formal referral to Aneel.

Rapportert av AI

Following last week's cyclone blackouts, the Tarcísio de Freitas administration officially demanded federal intervention in Enel's operations on December 15, citing chronic underinvestment and service failures under federal laws. Mayor Ricardo Nunes supported the call with evidence of Enel shortcomings, as outages persist for ~95,000 properties and federal penalties loom.

Energy experts warn that Colombia faces a real risk of electrical imbalance due to rising consumption and delays in generation projects. The system shows alert signs after 30 years without blackouts. Diversifying sources and improving transmission are urged to avoid rationing in 2026 and 2027.

Rapportert av AI

The National Electric Energy Agency (Aneel) announced that the tariff flag for January 2026 will be green, with no extra costs on electricity bills for Brazilian consumers. This follows eight months of yellow and red flags, due to maintained rainfall and hydroelectric reservoir levels in November and December. The last green flag was applied in April 2025.

The Ministry for Ecological Transition will approve two extraordinary credits worth 220 and 450 million euros to offset the 80% cut in fees for electrointensive industry and the suspension of the 7% IVPEE tax in 2026. These measures are part of the Real Decreto Ley approved by the Council of Ministers on Friday, published in the BOE on Saturday, and effective from Sunday.

Rapportert av AI

The National Electric Energy Agency (Aneel) announced that the tariff flag for April will be green, with no additional charges on electricity bills. The decision reflects satisfactory reservoir levels in hydroelectric plants due to March rains. The green flag has been in effect since January.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis