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Redeia Slips After Spain Power Outage

Shares in Spain’s grid operator Redeia [RED.E] have fallen around 7.1% after the company’s Q1 profit miss, which was worsened by a massive blackout that swept across the country at midday last Monday, 28 April.

National flag of Spain waving on the flagpole over a clear blue sky

Roughly 15 GW—equal to about 60% of national demand—vanished from the system in under five seconds. The official explanation of the cause remains pending, but Redeia may face regulatory heat over its handling of the incident. Spain’s competition watchdog CNMC, is reviewing an internal report on the blackout today (5 May), potentially paving the way for sanctions.

The uncertainty over both the yet unexplained outage and possible sanctions is adding pressure to the stock, which had traded in a relatively stable range over the past five years, fluctuating between EUR 13.8 and EUR 19.3 per share.

Early commentary has pointed to solar overproduction as a possible trigger for the blackout. The incident has ignited debate over whether Spain’s energy transition is pushing the national grid to its limits, with renewables accounting for 56.8% of generation capacity in the system managed by Redeia, formerly listed as Red Eléctrica.

Redeia has denied the possibility of a cyberattack, easing initial doubts. However, the Spanish government is still investigating that angle and has opened a judicial inquiry to rule it out, leaving the door open to further action against the company if mismanagement is found.

Green Push Under Scrutiny

Spain’s growing dependence on solar and wind—key pillars of its decarbonisation strategy—poses a structural challenge, as these sources produce power intermittently and don’t provide the grid inertia offered by nuclear, hydro or gas-fired plants. (Source: Cuatro)

At the time of the blackout, renewables made up 71% of total generation—58% solar and 13% wind—prompting speculation that a sudden production surge during low midday demand may have destabilised the system overseen by Redeia.

While early expert commentary has pointed to renewables, the Spanish government has rejected that view, arguing the issue was a mismatch between high generation and low demand, not the nature of clean energy itself.

Still, the episode has reopened debate about whether Spain’s energy transition is advancing too aggressively. Under a roadmap approved in 2019, the country plans to shut down all seven of its nuclear reactors—operated by Iberdrola [IBE.E], Endesa [ELE.E], and Naturgy [NTGY.E]—by 2035.

Muted Market Impact for Generators

While Redeia shares dropped from EUR 19.18 at the open on 28 April to EUR 17.82 by the close on 2 May—a 7.09% decline—the reaction was more subdued among Spain’s main listed power generators.

During the same period, Endesa rose from EUR 25.78 to EUR 26.26, up 1.86%. Iberdrola advanced 1.74%, climbing from EUR 15.47 to EUR 15.74. Naturgy edged down slightly, from around EUR 26.10 to EUR 26.02, a 0.31% dip.

Redeia, whose 2024 revenue is almost entirely tied to the operation of Spain’s domestic electricity transmission infrastructure—EUR 1.396bn of EUR 1.48bn total—faces direct scrutiny as the power crisis centers right now on a possible mismatch between generation and demand.

By contrast, Iberdrola generates income from multiple business segments and has major operations in Mexico, Brazil, the UK and the US. Meanwhile,  Endesa also spans power generation, distribution and retail, and is a key player in Spain’s natural gas market.

Some businessmen have urged the government to revisit its nuclear phase-out plan. Endesa CEO José Bogas has publicly called for a review, noting that nuclear currently covers 20% of Spain’s electricity demand and provides key stability to the system.

Conclusion

The 28 April blackout, coupled with the weak earnings report, has thrown Redeia into the spotlight, with its shares under pressure and regulators probing whether poor supply-demand coordination played a role. Whether the outage prompts a rethink of Spain’s green strategy remains to be seen.

For now, Redeia is bearing the brunt. Iberdrola, Endesa and Naturgy shares have held steady, supported by diversified business models and international footprints—unlike Redeia, whose business is concentrated in Spain and centred on operating the national transmission system at the core of the disruption.

Attention now turns to whether the government adjusts its nuclear phase-out or reinforces grid safeguards. Either way, Redeia still faces several uncertainties that may take weeks to clear.

*Past performance does not reflect future results.

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