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After the Blackout: Europe’s New Energy Future Ahead

Summary by Impakter
Impakter After the Blackout: Europe’s New Energy Future Ahead Let’s rewind for a moment. Not too long ago, Spain and Portugal plunged into darkness — a vast blackout, so synchronized, it felt like a prelude to a cyberpunk dystopia. Screens died, trains halted, and in the confusion, one word surged to the surface like a headline typed in all caps: renewables. The accusation came […] The post After the Blackout: Europe’s New Energy Future Ahead ap…
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The last electrical blackout on Monday has sparked not only the alarm among the citizens, but also their interest in solar energy. Energy installers and consultants confirm a sudden upturn in the consultations to install solar panels in private homes. Has a crisis been necessary to react? It seems that yes. Although we have been talking for years about the change of energy model and the benefits of the sun—an abundant resource in Spain—it has no…

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The Minister of Environment and Energy of Portugal, Maria da Graça Carvalho, said this Friday in an interview she said that, "if everything goes well", her country wants to return to "normality" and fully resume the electrical exchange with Spain after last week's blackout. In a telephone conversation, Carvalho recalled [...] The entry Portugal plans to resume the electrical exchange with Spain after the blackout was first published in Informati…

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The huge blackout that hit the Iberian Peninsula on April 28 has revived a debate in Spain about the country's plan to phase out its nuclear reactors while generating more energy from renewable sources.

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A second foreign operator points to the excess of renewable energies as the cause of the electricity blackout that took place in Spain on April 28.

·Madrid, Spain
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It is the paradox of the blackout. Also of the government’s speech. President Pedro Sánchez said last Wednesday that nuclear power was not the solution to the blackout but rather the problem. Also that the only future he has in the energy development of our country goes through renewable energy. While suspicions that the excessive weight of renewable energy, with less capacity to absorb voltage alterations in the electricity grid, could be the c…

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El Independiente broke the news in on Thursday, May 8, 2025.
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