Join the movement to end censorship by Big Tech. StopBitBurning.com needs donations and support.
Spain’s renewable energy experiment triggers nationwide BLACKOUT
By ljdevon // 2025-05-27
Mastodon
    Parler
     Gab
 
As governments rush to embrace renewable energy as a panacea for climate change, Spain’s recent nationwide blackout serves as a sobering reality check. What was initially dismissed as a technical glitch now appears to have been the result of a dangerous experiment — pushing the limits of renewable energy reliance while dismantling nuclear power. The Iberian Peninsula’s catastrophic power failure last month left millions in the dark, stranded trains, paralyzed hospitals, and exposed the fragility of an energy grid unprepared for the instability of renewable energy exclusivity. While Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez urges patience, critics argue that the government’s reckless pursuit of green ideology has jeopardized national security and economic stability, putting millions of lives at risk, and pushing populations to the brink of plummeting into societal chaos. Key points:
  • Spain’s April blackout, one of Europe’s worst, coincided with government experiments testing renewable energy reliance ahead of a planned nuclear phase-out.
  • Authorities ignored critical warning signs, including power grid oscillations, before the system collapsed.
  • Renewable energy now supplies 57% of Spain’s electricity, but experts warn that over-reliance on intermittent sources risks destabilizing the grid.
  • The blackout disrupted hospitals, transportation, and emergency services, raising urgent questions about energy policy and infrastructure resilience.
  • Despite official denials, suspicions linger about possible cyber sabotage or systemic failures in Spain’s rapid green transition.

A reckless gamble with national power

Spain’s socialist government, led by Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, has aggressively pursued renewable energy expansion while targeting nuclear power for elimination. The country plans to shutter all nuclear reactors by 2035, despite nuclear energy providing a stable 20% of its electricity. Instead, officials have bet heavily on wind, solar, and hydro power—sources vulnerable to weather fluctuations and grid instability. The April 28 blackout, which plunged Spain and Portugal into chaos, was initially blamed on a sudden 2.2-gigawatt drop in power generation. However, the Spanish Association of Electrical Energy Companies (Aelec) disputed this claim, arguing that the grid itself failed to manage renewable inputs, triggering an automatic shutdown. Jose Donoso, head of Spain’s photovoltaic association, told 20 Minutos, "It’s a matter of logic; the fact that the entire system goes down because of a photovoltaic plant makes no sense."

Ignoring the warning signs

Documents reveal that Spanish authorities had been conducting stress tests on the grid days before the collapse, ignoring alarming fluctuations in power. Officials have been accused of downplaying these red flags, confining their investigation to a mere 20-second window while dismissing hours of instability. The blackout’s aftermath was catastrophic: 35,000 passengers were stranded on stalled trains, hospitals relied on backup generators, and emergency services struggled to respond. Just weeks later, Spain suffered another crippling outage as major telecom networks failed, cutting off landlines, internet, and emergency services. Spain’s crisis mirrors growing concerns about the feasibility of rapid renewable transitions. Germany, another green energy advocate, has faced similar instability, resorting to coal plants to compensate for unreliable wind and solar output.

A cautionary tale for the world

Spain’s crisis mirrors growing concerns about the feasibility of rapid renewable transitions. Germany, another green energy advocate, has faced similar instability, resorting to coal plants to compensate for unreliable wind and solar output. Meanwhile, critics argue that governments are sacrificing energy security for political agendas, leaving citizens vulnerable to cascading failures. As Spain’ criminal court criminal court investigates whether the blackout was an act of "computer sabotage on critical infrastructure," the incident underscores a chilling truth: no nation is truly prepared for the consequences of abandoning reliable energy sources in favor of untested green experiments. For the latest news on grid failures and other collapse scenarios, check out Collapse.News. Sources include: ClimateDepot.com Dailymail.co.uk Telegraph.com
Mastodon
    Parler
     Gab