
Fouvry GraphFinancials
21.3K posts

Fouvry GraphFinancials
@GraphCall
Connect the Financial dots. Analysis organized & presented in proprietary big-data & augmented web. Patent US 11,327,775 B2 ex hedgie 👇 get a free account










Europe's official grid authority has released its report on the nationwide blackout that hit Spain last year. And while the report treads carefully politically, its data make the cause clear. Wind and solar triggered the collapse. Within the first 80 seconds, Spain lost 2.5 GW of generation, around 10% of its national supply, with every MW of that early loss coming from renewables. Gas and hydro remained stable until the cascade was already underway. The report calls it an unprecedented speed of blackout. This was a textbook inverter chain failure, with renewables dropping so fast that the grid's stabilizers never had time to react. By midday, Spain's grid had virtually no inertia, nothing spinning fast enough to hold frequency steady. But to admit that outright would mean questioning Europe's green transition itself, something the report appears unable to do. So the event is officially described as "a rare local disturbance," rather than what it actually was... A systemic failure of weather-dependent power.







1/4 DOXA: According to many posts on x the use of renewables leads to unstable grid, while nuclear and fossil fuel dominated grid would be much more stable. FALSIFICATION DATA! SAIDI measures the total time the average person is without power annually. Data compile by @Grok.

Europe's official grid authority has released its report on the nationwide blackout that hit Spain last year. And while the report treads carefully politically, its data make the cause clear. Wind and solar triggered the collapse. Within the first 80 seconds, Spain lost 2.5 GW of generation, around 10% of its national supply, with every MW of that early loss coming from renewables. Gas and hydro remained stable until the cascade was already underway. The report calls it an unprecedented speed of blackout. This was a textbook inverter chain failure, with renewables dropping so fast that the grid's stabilizers never had time to react. By midday, Spain's grid had virtually no inertia, nothing spinning fast enough to hold frequency steady. But to admit that outright would mean questioning Europe's green transition itself, something the report appears unable to do. So the event is officially described as "a rare local disturbance," rather than what it actually was... A systemic failure of weather-dependent power.



1/4 DOXA: According to many posts on x the use of renewables leads to unstable grid, while nuclear and fossil fuel dominated grid would be much more stable. FALSIFICATION DATA! SAIDI measures the total time the average person is without power annually. Data compile by @Grok.





Europe spent years debating whether the energy transition was affordable. Spain quietly answered the question: gas now sets its electricity price in only 7% of hours (in Italy is 90%). Strategic autonomy must be built in advance, in wind farms, solar parks, and grid investment, or it isn’t built at all. The countries still exposed to fossil fuel price shocks didn’t lack the warnings. They lacked the will.






