From the BBC:
“'Everything went off': How
Spain and Portugal's massive power cut unfolded”
The first sign of trouble Peter
Hughes noticed was when his train to Madrid started to slow down. Then the TV
monitor and lights went off. Emergency lights switched on, but did not last,
and the locomotive ground to a halt. Four hours later, Mr Hughes was still
stuck on the train 200 kilometres (124 miles) outside of Spain's capital. He
had food and water, but the toilets were not working. "It will be getting
dark soon and we could be stuck here for hours," he told the BBC. The
massive power cut that stranded Mr Hughes triggered chaos across Spain and
Portugal, and also impacted Andorra and parts of France, from about midday
local time (10:00 GMT).
Traffic lights shut off. Metros
closed. Businesses shuttered and people joined queues to get cash as card
payments did not work. Jonathan Emery was on a different train halfway between
Seville and Madrid when the cuts hit. For an hour, he sat on the train, the
doors closed, until people could pry them open to let in ventilation. Half an
hour later, passengers left, only to find themselves stranded. That was when
people from local villages started coming and dropping off supplies – water,
bread, fruit. "Nobody is charging for anything, and word must be getting
around in the local town because people just keep coming," he said.
In Madrid, Hannah Lowney was half
way through scanning her grocery shopping at Aldi when the power went out. People
were coming out of their offices and walking home because they could not tell
when the buses were coming, Ms Lowney said in a voice message sent to BBC Radio
5 Live. "It's a bit disconcerting that it's the whole country, I've never
experienced this before," she said. Mark England was eating lunch in the
restaurant of the hotel where he is staying on holiday in Benidorm when
"everything went off and the fire alarm started going off and the fire
doors started closing".
In an international school in
Lisbon, the electricity flickered on and off for a while, then gave up, teacher
Emily Thorowgood said. She kept teaching in the dark, the children in good
spirits, but lots of parents were taking their children out of school, she
said. "The walk home felt very strange, both with the lack of traffic
lights meaning a complete free-for-all for vehicles and pedestrians on the
roads - as well as so many people milling around outside their places of work
with nothing to do," he said.
Initially, mobile phone networks also went down for some, leaving many scrambling for information. Curtis Gladden, who is in La Vall D'Uixo, about 30 miles from Valencia, said it was "scary" as he struggled to get updates about what was happening. Eloise Edgington, who could not do any work as a copywriter in Barcelona, said she was only receiving occasional messages, could not load web pages on her phone and was trying to conserve her battery. An hour and a half after the power went out, one resident of Fortuna, in south-east Spain, said her husband was driving around, trying to find a petrol station that could supply fuel to run a generator and keep their fridge powered. "We are worried about food, water, cash and petrol in case this goes on for a couple of days," said Lesley, a Brit who has been living in Spain for 11 years. Locals "have more to worry about" than the Madrid Open tennis tournament being suspended, she said, adding there is "very little news about what's happened". Mr England said walking down the street in Benidorm, a "majority of shops are in darkness and shuttered or have people on the entrances saying you can't come in. There's no cash machines, no traffic lights so it's strange."
After Mr Gladden's phone signal
returned after about two hours, he and others ventured out to cafes, but found
"nothing is working – we came to get some food and a drink but they can't
cook without electricity". Within two hours, Spanish power grid operator
Red Electrica said it was beginning to recover power in the north and south of
the country. But two-and-a-half hours after the cuts, Madrid's mayor José Luis
Martínez-Almeida still urged all residents to "keep their movements to an
absolute minimum and, if at all possible, to remain where they are", in a
video recorded from the city's integrated emergency security centre.
At 15:00 local time, Spain's
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez pulled together an "extraordinary"
meeting of Spain's national security council. Red Electrica CEO Eduardo Prieto
said at a news conference shortly afterwards that it could take "between
six and ten hours" to restore power. Just before 16:00, electricity
flicked back on in Malaga. By 17:00, the grid operator said power was being
restored "in several areas of the north, south and west of the [Iberian]
peninsula". Portugal's power firm REN gave a more dire prediction, saying
that it could "take up to a week" before the network was back to
normal.
Knock on effects continue:
Back-up generators at airports kicked on, allowing most flights to leave on
time, but some have been unable to operate. Tom McGilloway, on holiday in
Lisbon, was due to return to London on Monday night, but as of early evening
did not know what would happen. He said for the time being people were getting
drinks and food - but vendors told him they would only be able to keep working
until the batteries ran out on their payment terminals. "If I need to book
a hotel if the plane is cancelled, I don't know how I can do it if payments are
down," he added. "My partner's parents are trying to get petrol so
they can pick us up to take us back to Alentejo but many petrol stations are
closed or not taking payment. We might be stuck with no plan for where to stay
tonight."
^ Hopefully, the power will be
restored soon. ^
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