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A large part of Spain and Portugal is affected by a power outage

A widespread power outage in Spain and Portugal on Monday paralysed the public transport system, caused traffic jams and caused flights to be delayed.

Red Electrica, the Spanish electricity transmission company, said that the outage could last between six and ten hours. The cause was not known at the time. Officials have not ruled out the possibility of a cyber-attack.

Traffic lights failed to work, creating gridlock in Portugal and Spain. The outage affected the transport networks, hospitals and elevators.

In Madrid, there were hundreds of people standing in the street outside important office buildings. There was also a strong police presence, and officers were directing traffic, as well as driving through central atriums lit with lights.

Sources familiar with the situation say that the Spanish and Portuguese governments met in order to discuss the outage which briefly affected France. In addition, a crisis committee has been set up in Spain.

The Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has visited the control centre of Red Electrica, a company that provides electricity transmission.

The Spanish government stated that it was working to identify the cause and impact of the incident, and that all resources were being used to solve the problem as quickly as possible.

Red Electrica stated that it is working with regional energy providers to restore power. Portuguese utility REN has activated plans to restore electricity in phases.

The Madrid Open Tennis Tournament was suspended after the scoreboards and overhead cameras went dark. This forced 15th seed Grigor Dimitrov and his British opponent Jacob Fearnley to leave the court.

The European Commission stated that it had been in touch with the authorities of Spain and Portugal, as well as the European Network of Transmission System Operators ENTSO-E in order to determine the cause of this outage.

GRIDLOCK

In Europe, power outages of this magnitude are rare. A problem with the hydroelectric power lines between Italy and Switzerland in 2003 caused an outage that lasted for 12 hours across the entire Italian peninsula.

The air in Madrid was filled with police sirens, and helicopters hovered overhead.

The Torre Emperador, a towering skyscraper located in Madrid's capital, was evacuated by stairway. As the signal on their cell phones fluctuated, worried parents tried to reach their child's school.

In a video that was posted on X by the Madrid Mayor Jose Luis Martinez Almeida, he urged residents of the capital to minimize all travel and remain in their current location if at all possible.

Airports reported delays. AENA, the company that manages 46 airports throughout Spain, has reported delays at all of its airports.

Portugal's airport operator ANA has said that emergency generators have been activated at Porto and Faro Airports. This allows for the time being essential airport operations to continue.

In Lisbon, the operation is ongoing with some limitations. It said that there has been no impact on Madeira or Azores airports. Reporting by Emma Pinedo; writing by Nina Chestney, editing by Andrei Khalip; Mark Heinrich, Bernadettebaum, Timothy Heritage and Timothy Heritage;

(source: Reuters)