In the early hours of April 26, 2025, millions across Spain and Portugal were left without power. Official reports so far blame a combination of grid instability and damage to a high-voltage transmission line in southern France. But a deeper look reveals a bigger story that isn’t being widely discussed yet — the Sun itself may have played a hidden role.
April 2025 has been an intense month for solar activity. As Solar Cycle 25 nears its peak, Earth has been bombarded by powerful coronal mass ejections (CMEs) — huge bursts of solar plasma that can cause serious disruptions on our planet.
Here’s the timeline:
- April 15, 2025: A rare “cannibal” CME event occurred, where two eruptions merged into one massive blast. It sparked a G4-class geomagnetic storm, one of the strongest in years. Auroras were seen as far south as France.
- April 16, 2025: NOAA confirmed continued geomagnetic disturbances reaching G3 storm levels.
- April 22–23, 2025: Another strong G2 storm warning was issued, signaling continued instability in Earth's magnetosphere.
Geomagnetic storms like these can induce electrical currents in power lines, destabilizing grids even when there’s no direct "damage." In other words, the system can get "shaken" into failure.
Official agencies have so far only cited technical reasons for the blackout — no one is publicly linking it to space weather yet. However, given the intense solar storm activity throughout April, it is very possible that these events weakened the electrical grid's stability and made it far more vulnerable to any disruption, like the fire in France.
This matters — because if solar storms are contributing to grid failures, and governments aren’t being transparent, the public remains unaware and unprepared.
In our Alchemy of Ivy Mae Novella, we explore how seemingly "random" events often have much deeper natural causes. Nature still rules us, whether we acknowledge it or not.
Stay tuned. Watch the Sun. And stay curious.
Sources for Solar Activity Updates:
- NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center (swpc.noaa.gov)
- EarthSky’s Sun Activity Reports (earthsky.org)
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