
Spanish island hit by major power cut
The Canary island of La Palma was hit by a major power cut on Thursday morning, just 10 days after mainland Spain suffered a blackout.
According to La Palma's government, more than a third of its 85,000-strong population was without power for around 45 minutes.
Alberto Hernandez, the Canary Islands' energy chief, said a substation failure had caused a mismatch between energy supply and demand, which in turn triggered a power cut to protect the generating equipment.
The blackout was the second power cut to hit La Palma in a week. A smaller one left around 300 households and businesses without power for several hours last Thursday.
Fernando Gonzalez, La Palma's councillor in charge of energy, asked the Canary Islands government to seek solutions to the power problems on the island.
He said: 'La Palma is suffering from an energy emergency.'
The archipelago's government announced last month that it would install eight temporary fuel-burning power plants across Tenerife, Gran Canaria and Fuerteventura.
However, the overall plan, overseen by Spain's climate transition ministry, is to boost the use of renewable energy as sun and wind is relatively reliable on the archipelago, which is located off the coast of northwestern Africa.
In 2024, renewable energy accounted for 21 per cent of the electricity generated in the Canary Islands, compared to 57 per cent for the whole of Spain.
The blackout that struck Spain on April 28 did not affect the Canary Islands, which, like the Balearic Islands and the Spanish North African territories of Ceuta and Melilla, has its own power supply.
Pedro Sanchez, Spain's prime minister, has come under fire from the conservative opposition for not giving a reason for the outage and for refusing to rethink his plan to shut down the country's nuclear power plants.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
16 hours ago
- Reuters
Survivors of Spain's Franco-era 'fallen women' centres seek apology, recognition
MADRID/VALENCIA, June 6 (Reuters) - Consuelo Garcia del Cid was 16 when the family doctor came into her bedroom in Barcelona, Spain with her mother in 1974, grabbed her left arm and pushed a needle into a vein. She blacked out then woke up in a strange room a day's drive away in Madrid - one of thousands of girls and young women who were accused of a range of perceived moral failings and taken to state-run Catholic rehabilitation institutions during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco. On Monday, a Catholic body that includes most of the communities of nuns that helped operate some of the centres, will hold a ceremony to formally ask the women for forgiveness, the first event of its kind in Spain, announced in April but delayed by the death of Pope Francis. A start, but not enough, say campaigners who want a national apology for what they went through in the network of Patronato de Proteccion a la Mujer (Board for the Protection of Women) institutes - along the lines of Ireland's 2013 apology for the abuses in its Magdalene Laundries. "It's just the tip of the iceberg," said Pilar Dasi, 73, who spent several months at a centre in Valencia in 1971. "The event is good for the Church as it cleans its own image, but the government must also act." She said she was held after her cousin, a police officer, reported her for keeping "bad company", a reference to left-wing boyfriends. The operation was set up in 1941 by Franco's Justice Ministry, overseen by the board chaired by his wife Carmen Polo. It was active until 1985, 10 years after Franco's death. Spain's Democratic Memory Ministry - a body set up to tackle the legacy of Spain's civil war and Franco's regime - told Reuters it applauded the decision by the Spanish Confederation of Religious Entities (CONFER) to ask for forgiveness. The ministry said in a statement it hoped to hold its own ceremony later this year that would recognise the women as victims of the Franco regime. "They will be considered victims and will be given a declaration of recognition and reparation," it said, without going into further detail on the timing or substance of any event. Garcia del Cid said her family had called in the doctor in 1974 because they were worried about what they saw as her rebelliousness after she attended a number of demonstrations against the dictatorship. The centre where she went was "a sinister place, with extreme religious indoctrination, and life was reduced to working, scrubbing and praying," said the now 66-year-old who has written five books on the subject. "If you are told all day long that you are crazy, a slut, a lost cause, on the wrong path, there comes a point when you might start to believe it if you don't have a strong inner core." She said she was held until 1976. The institutes took girls and women aged up to 25, including single mothers, children of prisoners, and those reported by priests, neighbours or their families for deviating from strict Catholic moral standards. The centres sought to rehabilitate them, survivors say, through work and instruction. "A bad woman could be a girl who smoked, a girl who talked back like me, a girl who skipped school, wore miniskirts, kissed her boyfriend in the back row of the cinema," said 67-year-old Mariaje Lopez, who was placed in a centre from 1965 to 1970. "Girls who got pregnant were also considered bad girls, and often no one asked who the father was." One of the most feared centres was Penagrande maternity centre on the outskirts of Madrid, where many young women were pressured to give up their babies for adoption, campaign group Banished Daughters of Eve says. "Penagrande was the horror of horrors. It was scary to have a child there. Any child who went up to the infirmary never came back. They were given to other families, or sold, or whatever. We were told they died," said Paca Blanco, 76, who was in and out of several board centres between 1967 and 1969. CONFER - representing 403 Catholic congregations - announced in April it would hold a forgiveness ceremony, saying it took the step after listening to the experiences of survivors and conducting its own research. "It helps (the survivors) to live that moment of healing and liberation and... us as congregations also to improve our way of dealing with these realities," CONFER chairman Jesus Diaz Sariego told Reuters. The Spanish Conference of Bishops referred questions to CONFER, saying the Confederation was an independent body. The Vatican did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Garcia del Cid said she would be at the CONFER event that she saw as a step towards her and the thousands of others being recognised as victims of Franco's regime. But more was needed. "I will be buried with this," she told Reuters. "It was the greatest atrocity Spain has committed against women."


Reuters
19 hours ago
- Reuters
Spain's imports of Venezuelan oil dry up ahead of US sanctions deadline
MADRID, June 6 (Reuters) - Spain didn't import crude oil from Venezuela in April, ahead of a key sanctions deadline set by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration. Spain's largest oil company Repsol ( opens new tab is among foreign firms operating in Venezuela whose permits to export oil from the country were revoked by the United States. Repsol was given a May 27 deadline to wind down its operations there. Under that permit, Repsol received oil from state oil company PDVSA as payment for debt. The lack of imports in April followed sharp increases in 2024 and earlier this year, according to data released on Friday by Cores, an arm of Spain's energy and environment ministry. Repsol has held talks with U.S. authorities seeking ways to keep operating in Venezuela. Earlier this week, Chief Executive Josu Jon Imaz met with U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright. The cancellations of licences came after Trump issued an executive order in March, declaring that any country buying oil or gas from Venezuela would pay a 25% tariff on trades with the United States. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his government have rejected sanctions by the United States and others, saying they are illegitimate measures that amount to an "economic war" designed to cripple the country.


The Sun
a day ago
- The Sun
Murdered gangster Ross Monaghan warned ‘weeks earlier' of £250k bounty on head by Spanish cartel feud
ROSS Monaghan had a £250,000 price on his head over a feud with a Spanish drugs cartel linked to the south of England, it was claimed last night. The Lyons gang kingpin — the main target in a double execution that stunned Scotland's underworld — may have been taken out over a debt to the mystery mob. 4 4 4 Sources say threats had been made in the months leading up to Saturday's horror in the Costa del Sol — prompting questions over Monaghan's unguarded behaviour before he and fellow hood Eddie Lyons Jnr were killed. Our insider said: 'A firm from England with connections to Alicante had warned of a £250,000 contract on Monaghan weeks before the shooting. 'It's not clear if that information found its way to Monaghan but he must have known something was brewing because it was related to debts. 'People are shocked at how complacent he seems to have been and there is no doubt the shooter benefited from the element of surprise that night. 'It's well known Monaghan was involved with some serious people and whoever is behind it has seized the chance to strike.' The Scot, 43, and Lyons, 46, are understood to have enjoyed the company of a large group of friends as they watched the Champions League final at Monaghan's bar in Fuengirola. But as punters began to leave, the two Lyons bosses remained behind, leaving them vulnerable and exposed. It's also been claimed Monaghan had avoided his Irish bar for some time before he turned up on Saturday night adding to speculation the hitman and his getaway driver were tipped off. A source said 'They obviously knew he and Eddie were there, what they looked like, what they were wearing and possibly where they were sitting. 'The assassin approached at speed and homed in on the target with any hesitation. It's no wonder people suspect he was being fed information. Horror moment Scots gangster Ross Monaghan is shot dead by hitman at Spanish pub 'The attack also has some hallmarks of someone getting lucky. The car raced at a high speed and the shooter had no proper face covering like a balaclava and wasn't wearing gloves. 'If it was a carefully planned hit you'd expect a killer to make real efforts to hide their identity and limit any forensic link to the murder weapon.' We told how Monaghan's grieving family said their Glasgow enemies the Daniels are not to blame. The Daniels and allies of jailed Edinburgh cocaine kingpin Mark Richardson are under attack by hoods linked to Dubai-based Ross 'Miami' McGill, 31. 4