24th November 2025
Barcelona NewsCatalonia NewsMadrid NewsMain News

Pedro Sánchez calls for patience as the investigation into cause of blackout continues

Click here to read all our reports related to Spain’s blackout.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez asked for patience on Wednesday, as mounting pressure surrounds his administration to explain the cause of last week’s power outage that brought much of the Iberian Peninsula to a standstill.

The widespread outage on 28 April disrupted internet and telephone services, halted railway operations, forced businesses to close, and plunged numerous cities across Spain and Portugal into darkness. Even southwestern France experienced brief impacts.

While intense discussion continues in Spain regarding the blackout’s origins, authorities have yet to reach a definitive conclusion. Officials are currently reviewing vast amounts of data from electricity providers and the national grid operator.

‘The process will take its time because we will have to examine meticulously around 756 million pieces of data,’ Sánchez told MPs in the Spanish Congress on Wednesday, assuring that his government is determined to ‘get to the bottom of the matter’.

‘Citizens want to know what happened … what we will not do is prematurely close any debate. We will not rush to conclusions,’ he added.

The prime minister noted that initial technical findings suggest three separate incidents took place in southern Spain on 28 April, with the final one leading to the collapse of the power grid.

Previously released official data had pointed to two closely timed incidents – only five seconds apart – that caused a loss in power output equivalent to 60% of Spain’s electricity use at that moment.

Spain’s right-wing and far-right opposition parties have seized on the incident to criticise the PSOE socialist-led coalition, blaming its transition away from nuclear power and toward renewable energy for increasing the country’s vulnerability to such failures. ALSO READ: Spain’s opposition parties blame PM’s renewable energy policies for blackout.

However, Sánchez maintains that there is ‘no empirical evidence’ to support claims that ‘an excess of renewables or the lack of nuclear power plants’ triggered the outage.

Alberto Núñez Feijóo accused Sánchez of showing ‘arrogance’ and warned that his People’s Party (PP) would not let the issue fade ‘without resignations’.

Subscribe to the Weekly Newsletter from Spain in English.

ALSO READ: Spanish government says ‘several more days’ needed to pinpoint cause of blackout.

ALSO READ: Spain’s high court to open investigation as to possible cyberattack, as business sector counts cost.

Subscription Supporter Banner

 

 

 

Please support Spain in English with a donation.

Click here to get your business activity or services listed on our DIRECTORY.

Click here for further details on how to ADVERTISE with us.

Recent Posts

Spain’s Catholic Church discloses 101 abuse claims this year, under its new compensation system

News Desk

Spain’s Attorney General suspended for 2 years, after being found guilty of leak in tax fraud case

News Desk

Court orders Meta to pay Spanish media companies nearly half a billion euros for ‘unfair competition’

News Desk

Spain plans 480 more events to ‘celebrate recovery of democracy’ following Franco’s death 50 years ago

News Desk

Supreme Court releases ex-ally of PM implicated in corruption probe, but is barred from leaving Spain

News Desk

Spain pledges a further €615 million of aid to Ukraine – and Zelensky views Picasso’s ‘Guernica’

News Desk

Leave a Comment