High price to keep energy flowing

By Nashua Telegraph


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Getting electricity from a power plant to a customer seems straightforward enough: String wires on poles and connect each end.

But nothing is straightforward in energy these days, which helps explain why New EnglandÂ’s power grid has moved from being an ignored, 8,000-mile-long mesh to being at the heart of debate about alternative energy and our economic future.

“There’s a lot of public discussion about the transmission grid, which people didn’t seem to focus on in the past. People just flipped the switch and the lights went on,” said Joe Staszowski of Northeast Utilities, the parent company of Public Service of New Hampshire.

“The grid is no longer the invisible thing. People want to hear more about it,” said Gordon van Welie, chief executive officer of ISO-New England, the organization that oversees the power system. “It is part of the president’s speeches and public policy positions. It has been given a national profile.”

ItÂ’s about time, too.

New England last had major upgrades to the electricity transmission network a quarter-century ago, when nuclear power plants arrived. Power lines last a long time, but not forever, and their age is showing.

The New England grid is undergoing $4 billion in upgrades, many involving the constructing of high-voltage, 345-kilovolt lines, to keep it functioning. That includes the construction of a new substation in Fitzwilliam and a number of upgrades of 115-kilovolt lines in the Monadnock Region. The cost of this work is distributed equally among all New England electric customers.

Billions more are being proposed to upgrade the regional grid “backbone” and make the grid amenable to alternative energy, which will produce huge debate about who should pay.

Yet, despite all that hardware, there is perhaps no better indication of the complexity of today’s grid than the fact that the most innovative change to New England’s power system in recent years doesn’t involve wires or poles at all – it’s an auction.

The innovation is called the Forward Capacity Market, which had its first auction nearly two years ago as a way to use market forces to better ensure thereÂ’s enough electric production available down the road, and also to give an incentive for using less, as well as producing more.

“It’s like ensuring that you will have a hotel to stay in when the time comes to rent a room,” van Welie said.

This market has been a great success, with on-site site power production or efficiency, known as “demand resource,” accounting for about 10 percent of the total energy use in New England. National forecasts say utilities should shoot for 20 percent.

Basically, ISO forecasts electricity demand three years in advance, then runs a so-called descending clock auction to procure the cheapest capacity that can meet all that need. The payments from the auction cover a portion of the fixed cost, such as the expense of creating a power plant, to help encourage investors to fund electric systems, leaving operating costs to be covered by rate-payers based on costs determined at the actual time the power is needed by ISO.

An existing resource, like a PSNH power plant, gets a partial advance payment for a year while a new resource – a new power station or a guarantee of reduced demand – can lock in payment for longer periods, to encourage their development.

What’s particularly interesting is the reduced-demand guarantee, known as “demand-side resource,” as compared to a “supply-side resource” like a power plant.

“One of the big innovations of the Forward Capacity Market – New England was the first region to have done this – is it will allow demand-side resource to provide capacity on equal footing with supply-side resource,” van Welie said.

He explained it this way: A factory owner might want to invest in new lighting and reduce power use by 20 percent; they can bid that reduction into the market and be paid. That’s a “passive” demand-side resource, a fancy way of saying energy efficiency.

Even better, they might have enough flexibility in their production to be able to shut down a factory on demand, which is called “active” demand-side resource. On a hot day when everybody has turned on the air conditioning (even in New England, the biggest power-usage days occur in the summer), the company can be told to shut the factory or delay operations to reduce overall load. In return for this promise, they get an advance payment.

Another type of active demand-side resource is an on-site power plant at a factory, whether an old-fashioned generator or a bunch of solar panels on the roof. A company can pay for part of that investment by promising to stop using the power when itÂ’s needed in the grid.

“Many customers do that: put in behind-the-meter generation and then pay for at least part of that investment through the capacity market,” van Welie said.

The advantage to the grid is that it reduces the need for more power plants that only get turned on now and then to meet peak demand – such power is vastly more expensive than “baseload” power, which gets generated all the time – and can also reduce the need to build more power lines.

This is an example of what might be called the first iteration of the next-generation power grid. Instead of just pumping out as much power as each user wants whenever they want it, the Forward Capacity Market allows a back-and-forth communication between customers and providers to improve.

This only applies to wholesale customers rather than homeowners, because itÂ’s easier to deal with a small number of large users than hundreds of thousands of houses and apartments.

Making it possible for homeowners to be this flexible will require a move from the old model of power grid as “dumb pipes” to that term that on everybody’s lips from President Obama on down: smart grid.

The problem with making the grid smarter isn’t the wires, it’s the electronic “brains” at each end.

Control centers and homes need to be able to talk back and forth in real time so you can let them know that your rooftop wind turbine is pumping out excess energy for the grid to use, and they can let you know they need your refrigerator to cut back use for an hour this afternoon – or, in a real daydream scenario down the road, both sides can negotiate over who gets to use the energy stored in your electric car’s battery.

The advent of large-scale alternative energy such as the Lempster Mountain Wind Farm or the many, bigger wind farms cropping up in Maine adds to the need for a smart grid. Old-fashioned power plants, fired by oil, natural gas, coal or nuclear power, are dependable, producing power at least 80 percent of the time. Wind farms, on the other hand, generate power less than 33 percent of the time; solar panels are no better.

The grid has to be more flexible to handle these surges.

The first step is smart meters, or upgraded versions of the electric meters on your house.

Current meters only measure how much total power has entered the house. Newer meters can keep track of when the power arrives so utilities can institute “time of day” pricing, charging more for power when demand is high as an encouragement for people to shift their use to down times – running the dishwasher at night, for example – to reduce the need for producing expensive peak-time power.

Hypothetical future versions could connect to hypothetical “smart appliances,” which automatically ramp up or down as needed.

Alas, even time-of-day meters are few and far between these days.

“New England and Alaska have the lowest rate of advanced meters in the country – less than 1 percent,” van Welie said.

On the other hand, he added, smart-meter technology is still in its infancy, so “lagging may not turn out to be a bad thing.

“We’re starting now and we’ll be using the best technology,” he said. “I’m not that troubled by (lack of smart meters).

“The good news story has been we’ve seen this significant growth of demand-response at the wholesale level – in that regard, the New England region is ahead of the rest of the nation,” he said.

The 800-pound gorilla in the room, not surprisingly, is cost.

For example, smart meters cost far more than standard meters. In the Canadian province of Ontario, for example, one estimate is that every customer will pay up to $4 extra each month just to have the meters, and related infrastructure, installed. The hope is that the meters will allow a reduction in use that will save money in the long run, but the initial cost is huge and must be parceled out somehow.

Then thereÂ’s the grid itself: the wires and poles. Everybody wants more alternative energy, but it will require reworking much of the grid.

The old power model involved a relatively small number of big producers relatively near customers – not in cities themselves (that was the 19th-century model) but often in the same county or portion of the state. Over the years, large and intermediate connections have been built with this in mind, rather like interstate highways connecting cities, with major arterial roads branching off.

Alternative energy – wind farms, hydropower dams, the open space needed for large solar farms – must usually be placed in remote places where there aren’t enough power lines to carry all the power they produce.

For example, PSNHÂ’s parent company, Northeastern Utilities, is talking with Hydro Quebec about jointly building a 1,200-megawatt power line that would run to southern New Hampshire from hydropower plants up near Hudson Bay.

ISO-New England has developed some rough ideas for expanding the regional backbone to make it easier to shift power around from alternative energy at remote sites.

Cost estimates start at $3.5 billion and move up to $25 billion – sums that would give anybody pause.

The transmission issue is already hurting alternative energy, stalling the development of wind farms and wood-burning power plants north of the Notches. Perhaps $100 million or so of upgrades are needed to the Coos Loop, a portion of the grid connecting Coos County to southern New Hampshire, so that enough electricity could be shipped south to justify the construction of the new power plants.

The question is: Who should pay that bill?

“If you upgrade the loop, should the generators pay, should North Country folks pay, should New Hampshire customers pay, should New England customers pay?” said PSNH’s Staszowski. “This question – who pays? – is not only local and regional, but national.”

For example, some of the best wind power in the U.S. exists in the upper Midwest, which is empty and flat enough to make huge wind farms feasible.

Bringing that power to New York and New England could cost as much as $150 billion in new transmission lines.

It could offset billions of dollarsÂ’ worth of imported oil and new power plants, not to mention helping cut pollution, but thereÂ’s still the up-front cost to parcel out.

“If they produce tens of thousands (of megawatts) of wind in the Dakotas and want to ship it to the East Coast and the South, they need to build big transmission lines. Who should pay?” Staszowski said. “There’s really a big national debate on who will pay for transmission and who are the real beneficiaries of it.”

The recession has reduced electricity consumption, trimming the price of fossil fuels, which has made the complicated question of cost even more complicated.

“That made it much harder to economically justify renewable-energy projects – it’s a harder justification than it was 12-18 months ago,” van Welie said. “Some of the transmission investment is also being re-examined.”

This reflects the new reality, he said: Even as more attention is being devoted to the grid, more people realize what it can make possible.

“There are lots of possibilities,” he said at a recent gathering of the New Hampshire Business and Industry Association.

“The question is, how far do we want to go and what makes economic sense?”

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EU Electrification Strategy 2050 outlines shifting transport, buildings, and industry to clean power, accelerating EV adoption, heat pumps, and direct electrification to meet targets, reduce emissions, and replace fossil fuels with renewables and low-carbon grids.

 

Key Points

EU plan to cut emissions 95% by 2050 by electrifying transport, buildings and industry with clean power.

✅ 60% of final energy from electricity by 2050

✅ EVs dominate transport; up to 63% electric share

✅ Heat pumps electrify buildings; industry to 50% direct

 

The European Union has one of the most ambitious carbon emission reduction goals under the global Paris Agreement on climate change – a 95% reduction by 2050.

It seems that everyone has an idea for how to get there. Some are pushing nuclear energy. Others are pushing for a complete phase-out of fossil fuels and a switch to renewables.

Today the European electricity industry came out with their own plan, amid expectations of greater electricity price volatility in Europe in the coming years. A study published today by Eurelectric, the trade body of the European power sector, concludes that the 2050 goal will not be possible without a major shift to electricity in transport, buildings and industry.

The study finds that for the EU to reach its 95% emissions reduction target, electricity needs to cover at least 60 percent of final energy consumption by 2050. This would require a 1.5 percent year-on-year growth of EU electricity use, with evidence that EVs could raise electricity demand significantly in other markets, while at the same time reducing the EU’s overall energy consumption by 1.3 percent per year.

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Transport is one of the areas where electrification can deliver the most benefit, because an electric car causes far less carbon emissions than a conventional vehicle, with e-mobility emerging as a key driver of electricity demand even if that electricity is generated in a fossil fuel power plant.

In the most ambitious scenario presented by the study, up to 63 percent of total final energy consumption in transport will be electric by 2050, and some analyses suggest that mass adoption of electric cars could occur much sooner, further accelerating progress.

Building have big potential as well, according to the study, with 45 to 63 percent of buildings energy consumption could be electric in 2050 by converting to electric heat pumps. Industrial processes could technically be electrified with up to 50 percent direct electrification in 2050, according to the study. The relative competitiveness of electricity against other carbon-neutral fuels will be the critical driver for this shift, but grid carbon intensity differs across markets, such as where fossil fuels still supply a notable share of generation.

 

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Opp Leader calls for electricity market overhaul to favor consumers over generators

Labor National Electricity Market Reform aims to rebalance NEM rules, support a fair-dinkum clean energy target, enable renewable zones, bolster storage and grid reliability, empower households, and unlock CEFC investment via the Finkel review.

 

Key Points

Labor's plan to overhaul NEM rules for households, clean energy targets, renewable zones, storage, and CEFC investment.

✅ Revises NEM rules to curb big generators' market power

✅ Backs a clean energy target informed by the Finkel review

✅ Expands renewable zones, storage, and CEFC finance

 

Australia's Labor leader Bill Shorten has called for significant changes to the rules governing the national electricity market, saying they are biased in favour of big energy generators, leaving households worse off even with measures like a WA electricity bill credit in place.

He said the national electricity market (NEM) rules are designed to help the big companies recoup the money they spent on purchasing government assets, a dynamic echoed in debates like a Calgary market overhaul dispute unfolding in Canada, rather than encourage households to generate their own power, and they need to change faster to adapt to consumer needs.

His comments hint at a possible overhaul of the NEM’s governance structure under a future Labor government, because the current rule-making process is too cumbersome and slow, with suggested rules changes taking years to be introduced.

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Labor had promoted a similar idea in the lead-up to the 2016 election, with its call for an electricity modernization review, but now the Finkel review has been released it would be used to guide such a review.

In a speech to the Australian Financial Review’s National Energy Summit in Sydney on Monday, Shorten recommitted Labor to negotiating a “fair-dinkum” clean energy target with the Turnbull government, amid modelling that a strong clean energy target can lower electricity prices, saying “it’s time to put away the weapons of the climate change wars” and work together to find a way forward.

He said the media and business can all share the blame for Australia’s lost decade of energy policy development, with examples abroad showing how leadership steers change, such as in Alberta where Kenney's influence on power policy has been pronounced, but “we need to stop spoiling for a fight and start seeking a solution”.

“The scare campaigns and hyper-partisanship that got Australia into this mess, will not get us out of it,” he will say.

“That’s why, a bit over four months ago, before the chief scientist released his report, I wrote to the prime minister offering an olive branch.

“I said Labor was prepared to move from our preferred position of an emissions intensity scheme and negotiate a fair-dinkum clean energy target.

“That offer was greeted with some cynicism in the media. But let me be crystal clear – I made that offer in good faith, and that offer still stands.”

Shorten said Australia needs to resolve the current “gas crisis” and do more to drive investment in renewable energy that delivers more reliable electricity, a priority underscored by the IEA's warning that falling global energy investment risks shortages, and if Labor wins the next election it will organise Australia into a series of renewable energy zones – as recommended by the chief scientist, Alan Finkel – that identify wind, solar, pumped hydro and geothermal resources, and connect them to the existing network.

“These zones would be based on both existing generation and storage in the area – and the potential for future development,” he said.

Australia's politics only barrier to clean energy system, report finds

“Identifying these zones – from eastern Queensland, north-east New South Wales, west Victoria, the Eyre Peninsula in South Australia and the entire state of Tasmania – will also plant a flag for investors – signalling future sites for job-creating projects.”

Shorten also said Labor will free up the Clean Energy Finance Corporation to invest in more generation and more storage.

“Under Labor, the return benchmark for the CEFC was set at the weighted average of the Australian government bond rate.

“Under this government, it was initially increased to the weighted average plus 4% to 5% and is now set at the average plus 3% to 4%.

“Setting the return benchmark too high defeats the driving purpose of the CEFC and it holds back the crucial investment Australia needs – right now – in new generation and storage.

“This is why a Labor government would restore the original benchmark return of the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, to invest in more generation, more storage and more jobs.”

 

 

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Setbacks at Hinkley Point C Challenge UK's Energy Blueprint

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Key Points

Delays at EDF's 3.2GW Hinkley Point C push operations to 2031, lift costs to £46bn, and risk pricier UK electricity.

✅ First unit may slip to 2031; second unit date unclear.

✅ LSEG sees 6% wholesale price impact in 2029-2032.

✅ Sizewell C replicates design; SMR contracts expected soon.

 

Vincent de Rivaz, former CEO of EDF, confidently announced in 2016 the commencement of the UK's first nuclear power station since the 1990s, Hinkley Point C. However, despite milestones such as the reactor roof installation, recent developments have belied this optimism. The French state-owned utility EDF recently disclosed further delays and cost overruns for the 3.2 gigawatt plant in Somerset.

These complications at Hinkley Point C, which is expected to power 6 million homes, have sparked new concerns about the UK's energy strategy and its ambition to decarbonize the grid by 2050.

The UK government's plan to achieve net zero by 2050 includes a significant role for nuclear energy, reflecting analyses that net-zero may not be possible without nuclear and aiming to increase capacity from the current 5.88GW to 24GW by mid-century.

Simon Virley, head of energy at KPMG in the UK, stressed the importance of nuclear energy in transitioning to a net zero power system, echoing industry calls for multiple new stations to meet climate goals. He pointed out that failing to build the necessary capacity could lead to increased reliance on gas.

Hinkley Point C is envisioned as the pioneer in a new wave of nuclear plants intended to augment and replace Britain's existing nuclear fleet, jointly managed by EDF and Centrica. Nuclear power contributed about 14 percent of the UK's electricity in 2022, even as Europe is losing nuclear power across the continent. However, with the planned closure of four out of five plants by March 2028 and rising electricity demand, there is concern about potential power price increases.

Rob Gross, director of the UK Energy Research Centre, emphasized the link between energy security and affordability, highlighting the risk of high electricity prices if reliance on expensive gas increases.

The first 1.6GW reactor at Hinkley Point C, initially set for operation in 2027, may now face delays until 2031, even after first reactor installation milestones were reported. The in-service date for the second unit remains uncertain, with project costs possibly reaching £46bn.

LSEG analysts predict that these delays could increase wholesale power prices by up to 6 percent between 2029 and 2032, assuming the second unit becomes operational in 2033.

Martin Young, an analyst at Investec, warned of the price implications of removing a large power station from the supply side.

In response to these delays, EDF is exploring the extension of its four oldest plants. Jerry Haller, EDF’s former decommissioning director, had previously expressed skepticism about extending the life of the advanced gas-cooled reactor fleet, but EDF has since indicated more positive inspection results. The company had already decided to keep the Heysham 1 and Hartlepool plants operational until at least 2026.

Nevertheless, the issues at Hinkley Point C raise doubts about the UK's ability to meet its 2050 nuclear build target of 24GW.

Previous delays at Hinkley were attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, but EDF now cites engineering problems, similar to those experienced at other European power stations using the same technology.

The next major UK nuclear project, Sizewell C in Suffolk, will replicate Hinkley Point C's design, aligning with the UK's green industrial revolution agenda. EDF and the UK government are currently seeking external investment for the £20bn project.

Compared with Hinkley Point C, Sizewell C's financing model involves exposing billpayers to some risk of cost overruns. This, coupled with EDF's track record, could affect investor confidence.

Additionally, the UK government is supporting the development of small modular reactors, while China's nuclear program continues on a steady track, with contracts expected to be awarded later this year.

 

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Cooperation agreement for Rosatom and Russian Academy

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Key Points

A pact uniting Rosatom and RAS on nuclear R&D, fusion, and medicine to advance nuclear technologies across Russia.

✅ Joint R&D in fusion, accelerators, lasers, and new materials

✅ Focus on fuel cycle closure, safety, and waste management

✅ Shared strategic planning, standards, and expert evaluation

 

Russian state atomic energy corporation Rosatom and the Russian State Academy of Sciences are to cooperate on joint scientific, technical and innovative activities in areas including nuclear energy, nuclear medicine and other areas of the electricity sector under an agreement signed in Moscow on 7 February.

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Rosatom said the main areas of cooperation in the agreement are: the development of laser technologies and particle accelerators; the creation of modern diagnostic equipment, nuclear medicine and radiation therapy; controlled thermonuclear fusion; nuclear energy of the future; new materials; the nuclear fuel cycle and its closure; safety of nuclear energy and power sector pandemic response preparedness; environmental aspects of radioactive waste management; modern supercomputers, databases, application packages, and import-substituting codes; and also X-ray astronomy and nuclear planetology.

Likhachov said joint activities between Rosatom and the Academy would strengthen the Russian nuclear industry's "leadership" in the world and allow the creation of new technologies that would shape the future image of the nuclear industry in Russia. "Within the framework of the Agreement, we intend to expand work on the entire spectrum of advanced scientific research. The most important direction of our cooperation will be the integration of fundamental, exploratory and applied scientific research, including in the interests of the development of the nuclear industry. We will work together to form the nuclear energy industry of the future, and enhance grid resilience, to create new materials, new radiation technologies,” he said.

Sergeyev noted the "rich history" of cooperation between the Academy of Sciences and the nuclear industry, including modern safety practices such as arc flash training that support operations. “All major projects in the field of military and peaceful nuclear energy were carried out jointly by scientists and specialists of our organisations, which largely ensured their timeliness and success," he said.

 

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Key Points

A 100% purchase of Brazil's Evoltz, adding seven grid lines and delivering stable, inflation-linked cash flows.

✅ 100% stake in Evoltz with seven transmission lines

✅ Aligns with net-zero and renewable energy strategy

✅ Inflation-linked, core infrastructure cash flows in Brazil

 

The Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan has acquired Evoltz Participações, an electricity transmission firm in Brazil, from US asset manager TPG. 

The retirement system took a 100% stake in the energy firm, Ontario Teachers’ said Monday. The acquisition has netted the pension fund seven electricity transmission lines that service consumers and businesses across 10 states in Brazil, amid dynamics similar to electricity rate reductions for businesses seen in Ontario. The firm was founded by TPG just three years ago. 

“Our strategy focuses on allocating significant capital to high-quality core infrastructure assets with lower risks and stable inflation-linked cash flows,” Dale Burgess, senior managing director of infrastructure and natural resources at Ontario Teachers, said in a statement. “Electricity transmission businesses are particularly attractive given their importance in facilitating a transition to a low-carbon economy.” 

The pension fund has invested in other electricity distribution companies recently. In March, Ontario Teachers’ took a 40% stake in Finland’s Caruna, and agreed to acquire a 25% stake in SSEN Transmission in the UK grid. For more than a decade, it has maintained a 50% stake in Chile-based transmission firm Saesa. 

The investment into Evoltz demonstrates Ontario Teachers’ growing portfolio in Brazil and Latin America, while activity in Ontario such as the Peterborough Distribution sale reflects ongoing utility consolidation. In 2016, the firm, with the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), invested in toll roads in Mexico. They took a 49% stake with Latin American infrastructure group IDEAL. 

Evoltz, which delivers renewable energy, will also help decarbonize the pension fund’s portfolio. In January, the fund pledged to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. Last year, Ontario Teachers’ issued its first green bond offering. The $890 million 10-year bond will help the retirement system fund sustainable investments aligned with policy measures like Ontario's subsidized hydro plan during COVID-19. 

However, Ontario Teachers’ has also received criticism for its investment into parts of Abu Dhabi’s gas pipeline network, and investor concerns about Hydro One highlight sector uncertainties. Last summer, it joined other institutional investors in investing $10.1 billion for a 49% stake. 

As of December, Ontario Teachers’ reached a portfolio with C$221.2 billion (US$182.5 billion) in assets. Since 1990, the fund has maintained a 9.6% annualized return. Last year, it missed its benchmark with an 8.6% return, with examples such as Hydro One shares fall after shake-up underscoring market volatility.

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Cannes Film Festival Power Outage Under Investigation 

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Key Points

A May 24, 2025 blackout in Cannes disrupting events, under arson probe, exposing grid risks across Alpes-Maritimes.

✅ Substation fire and fallen high-voltage line triggered blackouts

✅ Palais des Festivals ran on independent backup power

✅ Authorities probe suspected arson; security measures reviewed

 

A significant power outage on May 24, 2025, disrupted the final day of the Cannes Film Festival in southeastern France. The blackout, which affected approximately 160,000 households in the Alpes-Maritimes region, including the city of Cannes, occurred just hours before the highly anticipated Palme d'Or ceremony. French authorities are investigating the possibility that the outage was caused by arson.

Details of the Outage

The power disruption began early on Saturday morning with a fire at an electrical substation near Cannes. This incident weakened the local power grid. Shortly thereafter, a high-voltage line fell at another location, further exacerbating the situation. The combined events led to widespread power outages, affecting not only the festival but also local businesses, traffic systems, and public transportation, echoing Heathrow Airport outage warnings raised days before a separate disruption. Traffic lights in parts of Cannes and the nearby city of Antibes stopped working, leading to traffic jams and confusion in city centers. Most shops along the Croisette remained closed, and local food kiosks were only accepting cash. Train service in Cannes was also disrupted. 

Impact on the Festival

Despite the challenges, festival organizers managed to keep the main venue, the Palais des Festivals, operational by switching to an independent power supply. They confirmed that all scheduled events and screenings, including the Closing Ceremony, would proceed as planned, a reminder of how grid operators sometimes avoid rolling blackouts to keep essential services running. The power was restored around 3 p.m. local time, just hours before the ceremony, allowing music to resume and the event to continue without further incident.

Investigations and Suspected Arson

French authorities, including the national gendarmerie, are investigating the possibility that the power outage was the result of arson, aligning with grid attack warnings issued by intelligence services. The prefect for the Alpes-Maritimes region, Laurent Hottiaux, condemned the "serious acts of damage to electrical infrastructures" and stated that all resources are mobilized to identify, track down, arrest, and bring to justice the perpetrators of these acts.

While investigations are ongoing, no official conclusions have been drawn regarding the cause of the outage. Authorities are working to determine whether the incidents were isolated or part of a coordinated effort, a question that also arises when utilities implement PG&E wildfire shutoffs to prevent cascading damage.

Broader Implications

The power outage at the Cannes Film Festival underscores the vulnerability of critical infrastructure to potential acts of sabotage. While the immediate impact on the festival was mitigated, the incident raises concerns about the resilience of energy systems, especially during major public events, and amid severe weather like a B.C. bomb cyclone that leaves tens of thousands without power. It also highlights the importance of having contingency plans in place to ensure the continuity of essential services in the face of unexpected disruptions.

As investigations continue, authorities are urging the public to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activities, while planners also prepare for storm-driven outages that compound emergency response. The outcome of this investigation may have implications for future security measures at large-scale events and the protection of critical infrastructure.

While the Cannes Film Festival was able to proceed with its closing events, the power outage serves as a reminder of the potential threats to public safety, as seen when a Western Washington bomb cyclone left hundreds of thousands without power, and the importance of robust security measures to safeguard against such incidents.

 

 

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