‘Rare atmospheric phenomenon' causes massive power outage in Europe - and it could even happen in Australia
Millions in Spain and Portugal have been left without electricity after widespread power cuts blamed on a 'rare atmospheric phenomenon,' with officials warning that it may take up to a week for things to get back to normal.
There is 'no indication' that a cyber attack is behind Monday's large-scale power cuts, Portugal's Prime Minister Luis Montenegro told reporters on Monday.
The cause of the power cut is still unknown, but it is clear that it 'did not originate in Portugal,' Montenegro said.
A 'rare atmospheric phenomenon' was blamed for the outages, which affected millions, Portugal's grid operator, Rede Eletrica Nacional (REN), said in a statement.
'Due to extreme temperature variations in the interior of Spain, there were anomalous oscillations in the very high voltage lines, a phenomenon known as 'induced atmospheric vibration,'' the statement continued.
'These oscillations caused synchronization failures between the electrical systems, leading to successive disturbances across the interconnected European network.'
Authorities in Spain have not yet responded to claims from REN that the issues originated in their country.
Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said the cause of the power cut is still unknown but said nothing can be ruled out at this point, as he addressed a news conference on Monday.
'Due to the complexity of the phenomenon and the need to rebalance electricity flows internationally, it is estimated that full normalization of the network could take up to a week,' the statement from REN went on.
Power started returning to parts of Spain and Portugal later Monday. Remain at home
As news of the power cuts spread, millions of ordinary people in Spain and Portugal were ordered to stay put, while photos of underground train stations and the Madrid Open tennis tournament plunged into darkness went viral on social media.
US tennis star Coco Gauff was being interviewed on court at the Open when the power went out, as video showed the advertising hoardings behind her going blank while her microphone also went dead.
Spain's nuclear reactors automatically stopped working after the outage, but are in a 'safe condition' after emergency generators kicked in, the country's nuclear safety council said in a statement.
Madrid's 3.3 million inhabitants were urged to stay where they were by the city's mayor after stoplights and highway tunnel lighting went down.
'I ask all residents of Madrid to keep their movements to an absolute minimum and, if at all possible, to remain where they are. We want to keep all roads clear,' Mayor Jose Luis Martinez-Almeida said in a video posted on social media.
'If emergency calls go unanswered, go to the police and the fire stations in person, where they will try to deal with all the emergencies which may present themselves.'
In Portugal, passengers of airline TAP Air were told not to travel to airports until further notice.
Parts of France also lost power briefly, but the network is now operating normally again, French grid operator RTE said.
The phenomenon, while rare, occurs when there are quick temperature changes or long periods of extreme temps — and it could happen even in the US, USA Today reported.
'The atmosphere does something to induce vibrations in power lines, which can lead to outages,' said AccuWeather meteorologist Dan DePodwin, adding that this can happen 'anywhere there are transmission lines.'
Australia's National Electricity Market (NEM) operates on one of the world's longest interconnected power systems - covering approximately 40,000 km of transmission lines.
Originally published as 'Rare atmospheric phenomenon' causes massive power outage in Europe - and it could even happen in Australia

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


The Advertiser
2 days ago
- The Advertiser
One dead as quake shakes Turkey's Mediterranean coast
At least one person has died after a 5.8-magnitude earthquake struck Turkey's west coast in the middle of the night. The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre said the quake struck in the early hours of Tuesday, with epicentre near the coastal town of Marmaris, just a few kilometres from the Greek island of Rhodes. Marmaris' governor, Idris Akbiyik, said in a post on X that a 14-year-old girl was hospitalised with panic attacks and died shortly afterwards. He said 69 people were injured after jumping from their homes during the tremor. No structural damage has been reported in Marmaris itself. At least one person has died after a 5.8-magnitude earthquake struck Turkey's west coast in the middle of the night. The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre said the quake struck in the early hours of Tuesday, with epicentre near the coastal town of Marmaris, just a few kilometres from the Greek island of Rhodes. Marmaris' governor, Idris Akbiyik, said in a post on X that a 14-year-old girl was hospitalised with panic attacks and died shortly afterwards. He said 69 people were injured after jumping from their homes during the tremor. No structural damage has been reported in Marmaris itself. At least one person has died after a 5.8-magnitude earthquake struck Turkey's west coast in the middle of the night. The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre said the quake struck in the early hours of Tuesday, with epicentre near the coastal town of Marmaris, just a few kilometres from the Greek island of Rhodes. Marmaris' governor, Idris Akbiyik, said in a post on X that a 14-year-old girl was hospitalised with panic attacks and died shortly afterwards. He said 69 people were injured after jumping from their homes during the tremor. No structural damage has been reported in Marmaris itself. At least one person has died after a 5.8-magnitude earthquake struck Turkey's west coast in the middle of the night. The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre said the quake struck in the early hours of Tuesday, with epicentre near the coastal town of Marmaris, just a few kilometres from the Greek island of Rhodes. Marmaris' governor, Idris Akbiyik, said in a post on X that a 14-year-old girl was hospitalised with panic attacks and died shortly afterwards. He said 69 people were injured after jumping from their homes during the tremor. No structural damage has been reported in Marmaris itself.

The Age
29-05-2025
- The Age
Waiting for rain as an ancient world files past, hoping truth matters
Winter's first serious cold front came charging in with the clouds. Too cold now for seed to germinate. Those who have been around for a while will tell you the season is pretty well buggered. Australia is built on paradox. Down here in western Victoria, while we prayed for rain and exulted to the music of it when it fell, large parts of NSW, drowning, had been praying for it to stop. Survival in Australia has also been built on resilience. As anyone who has been paying attention knows, resilience is becoming more imperative as climate change brings more extreme and frequent droughts and floods. In the hours before the rain came clattering on my roof, ranks of the most resilient Australians of all marched past my house. Denied a formal voice by a recent political strategy of divide and conquer, they were using their feet, heading to Parliament House, 400 kilometres away, to deliver truths gathered in a great document that tells their stories for the first time in their own words: about what happened after Europeans came and put an end to the world their ancestors had known for tens of thousands of years. They call it a Walk for Truth. Loading It began in Portland, where Victoria's colonisation began when the Henty family sailed in and established a permanent – and illegal – settlement in 1834. It will end on June 18 at Melbourne's Parliament House because that's where legislators hold out the hope of negotiating the first black-white treaty in Australia's history. The walkers, the first of more than 4000 registered to take part in stretches of the trek, are of Aboriginal and European heritage. They want the same thing. Call it justice through truth-telling, for that is what the Yoorrook Justice Commission, which has gathered the stories for the parliamentarians to absorb, was established to achieve. The Indigenous walkers carried not only close-held stories of injustice – stolen land, stolen children, massacres and marginalisation – but the knowledge that they are survivors of a culture so old it beggars the mind to imagine it. Their ancestors' experience of climate change reduces ours to not much more than a breeze on a drizzly day. The forebears of those born in the far south-west of Victoria were here when the volcanoes were still blowing their tops. We know this because a stone axe was found in the 1940s at Bushfield, near Warrnambool, a metre beneath the ash layer deposited by the last explosion of Tower Hill. Recent technology has established Tower Hill, between Warrnambool and Port Fairy, erupted 36,800 years ago (give or take an error margin of 3800 years). Not far away, Budj Bim near Macarthur (formerly known as Mount Eccles) had an eruption age of 36,900 years (plus or minus 3100 years). Portrayals of its fiery explosion live on in creation stories handed down through more than a thousand generations of Gunditjmara people. Thus, the minimum period in which Aboriginal people have lived in Victoria's south-west is 33,000 years, their own ancestors having arrived in Australia's north maybe 30,000 years before that. In Europe and Asia around that time, Homo sapiens were putting an end to Neanderthals and in some cases assimilating with them. When I was celebrating a rain shower that might have eased a drought of a few months, I was struck by the knowledge that many of those walkers passing my house carried the genes of people who had lived through Australia's last ice age and mega-droughts that each lasted 20 years and more. The last ice age hit its freezing glaciated peak about 20,000 years ago, and petered out about 11,500 years ago. How do a people emerge from a world flowing with boiling lava into thousands of years of deep freeze, in which the sea was 120 metres below its current level and the coastal plains of Victoria extended to the continental shelf and, in places, clear to Tasmania? And then witness their lands shrinking, with the sea rushing in and claiming back those coastal plains? Finally, a mere blink ago, there came Europeans sailing across the horizon, leading to more destruction of Aboriginal lives and culture in a few decades than volcanoes and almost 12,000 years of frozen landscape had been able to achieve combined. The walkers for truth drifted by, heading to a beach called Convincing Ground, site of the first recorded massacre in Victoria, and on to a lake in Budj Bim's lava field called Tae Rak, where the ancients built elaborate fish traps and farmed eels at least 6700 years ago. That's about 1000 years before the Britons got around to building Stonehenge. I waved to the last of the walkers and returned to tap-tapping my rainwater tanks, hoping for a proper end to the latest dry. And new beginnings.

Sydney Morning Herald
29-05-2025
- Sydney Morning Herald
Waiting for rain as an ancient world files past, hoping truth matters
Winter's first serious cold front came charging in with the clouds. Too cold now for seed to germinate. Those who have been around for a while will tell you the season is pretty well buggered. Australia is built on paradox. Down here in western Victoria, while we prayed for rain and exulted to the music of it when it fell, large parts of NSW, drowning, had been praying for it to stop. Survival in Australia has also been built on resilience. As anyone who has been paying attention knows, resilience is becoming more imperative as climate change brings more extreme and frequent droughts and floods. In the hours before the rain came clattering on my roof, ranks of the most resilient Australians of all marched past my house. Denied a formal voice by a recent political strategy of divide and conquer, they were using their feet, heading to Parliament House, 400 kilometres away, to deliver truths gathered in a great document that tells their stories for the first time in their own words: about what happened after Europeans came and put an end to the world their ancestors had known for tens of thousands of years. They call it a Walk for Truth. Loading It began in Portland, where Victoria's colonisation began when the Henty family sailed in and established a permanent – and illegal – settlement in 1834. It will end on June 18 at Melbourne's Parliament House because that's where legislators hold out the hope of negotiating the first black-white treaty in Australia's history. The walkers, the first of more than 4000 registered to take part in stretches of the trek, are of Aboriginal and European heritage. They want the same thing. Call it justice through truth-telling, for that is what the Yoorrook Justice Commission, which has gathered the stories for the parliamentarians to absorb, was established to achieve. The Indigenous walkers carried not only close-held stories of injustice – stolen land, stolen children, massacres and marginalisation – but the knowledge that they are survivors of a culture so old it beggars the mind to imagine it. Their ancestors' experience of climate change reduces ours to not much more than a breeze on a drizzly day. The forebears of those born in the far south-west of Victoria were here when the volcanoes were still blowing their tops. We know this because a stone axe was found in the 1940s at Bushfield, near Warrnambool, a metre beneath the ash layer deposited by the last explosion of Tower Hill. Recent technology has established Tower Hill, between Warrnambool and Port Fairy, erupted 36,800 years ago (give or take an error margin of 3800 years). Not far away, Budj Bim near Macarthur (formerly known as Mount Eccles) had an eruption age of 36,900 years (plus or minus 3100 years). Portrayals of its fiery explosion live on in creation stories handed down through more than a thousand generations of Gunditjmara people. Thus, the minimum period in which Aboriginal people have lived in Victoria's south-west is 33,000 years, their own ancestors having arrived in Australia's north maybe 30,000 years before that. In Europe and Asia around that time, Homo sapiens were putting an end to Neanderthals and in some cases assimilating with them. When I was celebrating a rain shower that might have eased a drought of a few months, I was struck by the knowledge that many of those walkers passing my house carried the genes of people who had lived through Australia's last ice age and mega-droughts that each lasted 20 years and more. The last ice age hit its freezing glaciated peak about 20,000 years ago, and petered out about 11,500 years ago. How do a people emerge from a world flowing with boiling lava into thousands of years of deep freeze, in which the sea was 120 metres below its current level and the coastal plains of Victoria extended to the continental shelf and, in places, clear to Tasmania? And then witness their lands shrinking, with the sea rushing in and claiming back those coastal plains? Finally, a mere blink ago, there came Europeans sailing across the horizon, leading to more destruction of Aboriginal lives and culture in a few decades than volcanoes and almost 12,000 years of frozen landscape had been able to achieve combined. The walkers for truth drifted by, heading to a beach called Convincing Ground, site of the first recorded massacre in Victoria, and on to a lake in Budj Bim's lava field called Tae Rak, where the ancients built elaborate fish traps and farmed eels at least 6700 years ago. That's about 1000 years before the Britons got around to building Stonehenge. I waved to the last of the walkers and returned to tap-tapping my rainwater tanks, hoping for a proper end to the latest dry. And new beginnings.