How to reveal the power outages in Spain and Portugal

How to reveal the power outages in Spain and Portugal

Malory Mindch and Jabriella Boumerewy

BBC News

The passengers of the Environmental Protection Agency are awaiting at the departure entrance at Hamberto Deljado Airport in Lisbon, where the area has been closed due to the obstruction of Spain and Portugal, in Lisbon, Portugal, April 28, 2025.EPA

Customers wait at Lisbon Airport

The first sign of the troubles noted by Peter Hughes was when his train began to Madrid to slow down.

Then the TV and lights screen was launched. Emergency lamps have been operated, but they did not last, and the locomotive land stopped.

Four hours later, Mr. Hughes was still stuck on the train 200 km (124 miles) outside the capital of Spain. He had food and water, but the toilets were not working.

“Darkness will be soon and we may stumble here for hours,” he told the BBC.

The massive pieces that were cut off by the ways of chaos throughout Spain and Portugal, and affected Andorra and parts of France, from around midday local time (10:00 GMT).

Traffic lights are closed. The metro closed. Companies closed and people joined the waiting lists to get money as cards did not succeed.

Jonathan Emery was on a different train in the middle of the road between Seville and Madrid when the cuts were struck.

For an hour, he sat on the train, closed the doors, so that people can open them to allow ventilation. Half an hour later, he left the passengers, just to find themselves cut off.

It was when people from local villages began to come and drop supplies – water, bread and fruits.

“Nobody receives anything, and the word should be wandered in the local city because people continue to come,” he said.

Jonathan Emery Jonathan Emery, wearing a T -shirt and sunglasses, stands in front of a train that stopped in the middle of the road during his journey in SpainJonathan Emery

Mr. Emery Karam described the local population after his train stopped moving

The passengers in Madrid left the corner in the dark when the power outage hit the city’s metro station network. One of the residents, Sarah Jovovich, was starting from the train when the lights came out.

“People were hysterical” and “panic”. “It was really very chaotic.”

The mobile phones stopped working and no one had any information. Once I got out of the metro station, the roasted roads were found in a dense traffic.

“No one understood anything. The companies were closed and the buses were full,” she said.

Hana was in the middle of the road by scanning grocery shopping in Aldi when the energy came out in the Spanish capital.

Ms. Lony said in a voice message sent to BBC Radio 5 Live, that people were leaving their offices and walking home because they could not know when the buses were coming.

“It is a little worrying that it is the entire country, I haven’t tested this before,” she said.

Mark England was lunch at the hotel’s restaurant, where he was staying on a vacation in Beedrorm when “everything started and the fire warning began to go out and the doors of fire began to conclude.”

Teacher Emily Thorwood said that at an international school in Lisbon, electricity and abroad had been shown for a while, and then surrendered.

She continued to teach in the dark, and children who wear good lives, but many parents were getting their children out of school.

Watch: Traffic chaos with power outages for Portugal and Portugal

Will David, the British who lives in Lisbon, had hair cutting and beard on the bottom of the barber when the authority fell. The barber found him a place next to the window on the top floor to finish the cut with scissors.

He said: “The Walk Home poetry is very strange, as the lack of traffic lights that means that they are free for all for vehicles and pedestrians on roads-in addition to many people who wander around their workplaces without anything.”

Initially, mobile phone networks also decreased for some, leaving many stampede for information.

Cortis Golden, in La Val Dalxo, said about 30 miles from Valencia, he is “frightening” because he struggled to get updates about what was happening.

Eloise Edgington, who could not do any work as a writer in Barcelona, ​​said she was only receiving cross messages, and she could not download web pages on her phone and was trying to keep her battery.

Mark England row from traffic lights on a column in a dark city in Spain, without electricityMark England

There are no lights: traffic signals remained empty in Bendorm and other places

An hour and a half after the energy came out, a Fortona resident, in southeastern Spain, said that her husband was wandering, in an attempt to find a gas station that could provide fuel to operate a generator and keep the refrigerator.

“We are concerned about food, water, criticism and gasoline if this continues for a few days,” said Leslie, a British who lived in Spain for 11 years.

She said the locals “have more anxiety than the Madrid Open Tennis Championship, adding that” very few news about what happened. ”

“The majority of stores are in the dark and closed or have people on the entrances they say you cannot enter,” said Mr. England walking on the street in Beardorm.

Mark England smiles two men in a personal photo in a street in Spain Mark England

Mark England (on the left) was on vacation with his partner, Johnny Smith, when she was hit

After the phone reference was returned to Mr. Gladden after about two hours, he and others ventured in cafes, but they found “nothing working – we came to get some food and drink but they could not cook without electricity.”

In two hours, Red Electrica, the Spanish power network operator, said he began to restore energy in the north and south of the country.

But after two and a half hours of discounts, the mayor of Madrid, Jose Luis Martinez-Blaida, urges all the population to “preserve their movements to the absolute minimum, and if possible, at all, in their place”, in a video recorded from the integrated emergency security center in the city.

At 15:00 local time, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez gathered a “unusual” meeting of the Spanish National Security Council.

Red Electrica Eduardo Prieto said at a press conference shortly after that it might take “between six and ten hours” to restore energy.

Immediately before 16:00, the electricity fell in Malaga. By 17:00, the network operator said that energy is restored “in several regions of the north, south and west [Iberian] peninsula”.

Portugal’s energy company gave a more clear prediction, saying that it might “take up to a week” before the network returns to normal.

The state of emergency was later announced through Spain, with areas capable of requesting special measures.

However, by Monday evening, Sanchez said that 50 % of the energy had been restored throughout Spain, while Rin said that electricity had been restored to 750,000 customers. Many, however, remains without strength.

“There is no plan to stay”

The effects that occur on the effects continue: the relative generators have been operated in airports, allowing most flights to leave on time, but some have not been able to work.

Tom McGilli, on a vacation in Lisbon, was scheduled to return to London on Monday evening, but early in the evening he did not know what would happen.

He said at a time when people were drinking drinks and food – but the sellers told him that they would not only be able to continue to work until the batteries were running out of their payment stations.

“If you need to reserve a hotel if the plane is canceled, I don’t know how to do this if the payments decrease,” he added.

“The parents of my partners are trying to get gasoline so that they can take us to return us to Alentejo, but many gasoline stations are closed or not paid. We may be stuck without a plan for the place to stay tonight.”

Spanish violinist, Isaac Bevet, went to a rehearsal in the morning in the symphony orchestra in Madrid. But the building was everything dark and most of the other orchestra players did not appear because they were cut off without transportation.

He told the BBC, because people who do not have money are particularly stuck.

Mr. Bevet said that today without strength was “strange” and “in the Middle Ages a little.” But “the atmosphere was really nice.”

As the electricity continues to come out in his apartment, he spent the evening drinking beer with friends with candles.

Isaac Bevitt Isaac BevetIsaac bifet

Isaac Bevet spent the evening drinking the candle light in his apartment

Additional reports and research by André Masia, Chris Bramewell, James Kelly, Bernadet Makagu and Josh Barry

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