EU NYT: Advice for Europeans: Bundle Up and Get Ready for Outages - As temperatures drop amid an energy crisis, governments say power blackouts may be necessary to conserve electricity

Advice for Europeans: Bundle Up and Get Ready for Outages
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Liz Alderman
2022-12-05 05:01:09GMT

Life in some European cities may soon look like this: Staggered electricity outages to save energy. Temporary cuts in mobile phone and internet service. Schools closed for a lack of lighting and heat. Even traffic lights could briefly be powered down.

Europe has spent months preparing for a winter without Russian gas, stockpiling fuel and pushing conservation measures in hopes of maintaining enough energy to keep power grids running.

But as an unseasonable streak of mild weather gives way to freezing temperatures, governments are starting to brace people for the possibility of controlled power cuts in the event that energy supplies are stretched — with a wide-ranging impact on daily life.

The French government last week started instructing officials around the country to plan for potential rolling electricity outages as soon as next month. Britain’s National Grid operator has warned households of possible blackouts from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. if gas used to produce electricity runs short. Electric car owners in Finland are being advised not to heat their plugged-in vehicles on freezing mornings to avoid straining the grid.

And in Germany, the country that has been most dependent on Russian gas, people are taking no chances: Sales of candles have soared.

A few hours without power in a French cafe or in a German supermarket would be nowhere as painful as the situation being faced by people in Ukraine, where Russia’s systematic bombing of the energy grid has left millions facing a freezing winter without electricity, heat and water supplies day and night in subzero temperatures and snow.

Still, the prospect of homes, schools, businesses and even trains that rely on power and electric signals going dark, however briefly, will be Europe’s first major test of resilience as it turns away from Russian fuel.

European officials are insisting that the rationing plans are only a last resort, to prevent uncontrolled blackouts if domestic electricity production and imported power aren’t enough to keep power systems from crashing.

“We’re not in a catastrophe film,” Olivier Véran, the French government spokesman, said on French television last week. “We are not announcing that cuts will happen, but if we have a particularly cold and energy-intensive winter, there could be situations of tension and we are preparing for all scenarios.”

Any scheduled power cuts in France would be telegraphed days in advance and would hit small sections of the country at different times, the government said. The cuts, which would last for two hours in the mornings or in early evening, when power use is at a high, would not apply to so-called sensitive sites, including hospitals, nursing homes, fire and police stations and prisons.

Europe has made a concerted effort since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February to avoid a worst-case situation by topping up natural gas reserves and even restarting coal-fired power plants to generate electricity. A near-total embargo on Russian oil begins Monday, one of many actions the bloc has taken to deny the Kremlin revenue from fossil fuel sales and limit its ability to wage war in Ukraine.

Unseasonably warm weather during October and November allowed households and businesses to keep their furnaces turned off, helping gas stocks last longer than expected and bringing down skyrocketing gas prices.

But Europe is now facing its first major cold snap, with an Arctic air blast from Greenland expected to send temperatures plunging in coming days. Governments have already been dipping into some of the emergency gas reserves, driving European natural gas prices back up to their highest levels in six weeks.

France, once Europe’s biggest exporter of electricity thanks to its 56 nuclear power plants, is struggling to repair a series of problems that have left nearly half of its atomic fleet offline, depriving its neighbors of a vital power source. Électricité de France, or EDF, which runs France’s nuclear power plants, announced the restart last week of a mammoth reactor in northern France, although further delays are expected at other nuclear sites.

A recent report by the European Network of Transmission System Operators showed that electricity supplies in France, Sweden and Finland, among others, were at risk of outages.

All of which has prompted the flurry of not-so-subtle signals for Europeans to start hunkering down for disruptions to their electricity-enabled lives.

Germany has issued advisories on what to expect in a blackout. “The telephone is dead, the heating doesn’t come on, there is no warm water, the computer goes on strike, the coffee machine stays off, there is no light,” the Office of Civil Protection and Disaster Assistance said on its website.

“You will soon notice how dependent you are on electric power,” added the agency, which translated the site into English, Turkish and Ukrainian.

The office urges households to stock up on battery-powered flashlights and candles, and even suggests camp stoves to prepare small meals. “Warm clothing can be used as a substitute for heating for a while,” the agency said, but advised households to think about installing alternative heating sources.

As in France, German officials have insisted that a power crisis is unlikely, but one “cannot be completely ruled out,” the finance ministry acknowledged. The authorities have taken no chances, with Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government making the politically divisive decision to cancel plans to shut down the country’s last three nuclear reactors this month, and to fire up coal power plants in hopes of making up for the loss of Russian gas.

In Switzerland, which has long depended on French nuclear power for its winters, citizens have been urged to prepare for outages lasting up to several hours. The Federal Electricity Commission urged people to have enough firewood, flashlights and batteries.

Even electric cars aren’t immune. Finland’s power grid operator, Fingrid, warned that electricity production has come under strain because of European sanctions on Russia, and the delayed opening of Finland’s Olkiluoto 3 nuclear power reactor, built by EDF.

In a country where almost a third of all vehicles are electric, Fingrid is urging owners to forgo the luxury of turning on the plugged-in car’s heater to melt ice off windows in the morning, when power demand is at a peak.

“That ice can be scraped off using elbow grease,” the company said.

President Emmanuel Macron’s government in France has set up a nationwide alert system to telegraph any rolling power cuts well in advance. Three days before electricity would be shut off anywhere, officials will make a public announcement and alert people on their cellphones via an app called EcoWatt that officials have urged everyone to download.

The government would confirm the power cuts at 5 p.m. the day before they are to take place. The outages would not last more than two hours, between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m., or 6-8 p.m.

While emergency sites would continue to receive power, plenty of other places won’t. Schools would not be spared: students will be instructed to stay home on mornings when classes are canceled because of lack of heat and light, and return in the afternoon. (The internet won’t work, either, making remote schooling difficult.)

Even trains could come to a standstill for a couple of hours in affected areas, because power needed to work signals would be shut off. The government said it would warn drivers to “limit their movements as much as possible” because traffic lights could be “inoperative.”

Cellphone towers will also stop working in areas where power is paused. Christel Heydemann, the chief executive of Orange, France’s top telecom operator, warned last week that emergency phone calls may not be possible if mobile networks lose electricity. The government said people could still dial 112, the Europe-wide number for emergencies.

Despite those assurances, Ms. Heydemann said, “It is illusory to imagine that we’ll be able to maintain service to all French people in the event of power cuts.”

Liz Alderman is the Paris-based chief European business correspondent, covering economic and inequality challenges around Europe. She was previously an assistant business editor, and spent five years as the business editor of what was The International Herald Tribune. @LizAldermanNYT
 
Blaming Ukraine/Russia for this is pointless, it was planned in advance and the war only made it happen sooner in the EU rather than simulationiously in every Western country. We're all going back to serfdom so the elites will fill safer while vacationing on their islands.
There's no way TPTB could have pulled off some simultaneous great reset. That's just cope. This is just bog standard retardation. The Euros thought they'd own Putler and are going to freeze to death bc of it.
 
There's no way TPTB could have pulled off some simultaneous great reset. That's just cope. This is just bog standard retardation. The Euros thought they'd own Putler and are going to freeze to death bc of it.
They probably wouldn't have managed but it was the plan. The last few years there has been a deliberate attempt to destroy the energy infrastructure in both the USA and Europe, it is weird if it happens solely due to the environmental death cult.
 
Europeans who miss taking hot showers and having warm temperatures indoors, miss having internet and electricity on demand, miss having clean streets not full of Africans and Arabs, and miss having access to museums and theaters that aren't full of eco-activists and pederasts, you're welcome to buy a ticket to St. Petersburg. Just try to respect the local culture and keep the public displays of homosexuality to a minimum.
 
Blaming Ukraine/Russia for this is pointless, it was planned in advance and the war only made it happen sooner in the EU rather than simulationiously in every Western country. We're all going back to serfdom so the elites will fill safer while vacationing on their islands.
Russia didn't do this to Europe. America did this to Europe... because they let us. They welcomed us in with open arms and fought their conflicts to the last American soldier.

Except now our soldiers are everywhere and Europe has none and have become nothing more than a pawn. The whole continent of Europe is one giant example to American citizens. When Washington needs more compliance, they turn the screws on Europe and point and say "this could be America if you don't get your shit together, peasant."
 
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There's no way TPTB could have pulled off some simultaneous great reset. That's just cope. This is just bog standard retardation. The Euros thought they'd own Putler and are going to freeze to death bc of it.
After the past 2 years I don't believe it's incompetence anymore. Maybe it is incompetence when it comes to the lowest level apparatchiks but they don't call the shots. When it comes to the upper echelons of power call it what it is - pure malice.
 
Well, maybe when the stupefying telly is cut off, and people are cold, and nothing works, and the kids come home to a cold house and no warm food or bath, then people will maybe, perhaps, maybe realise we are being destroyed. And just maybe they will decide that formation marching with pitchforks is fabulous exercise. We are all fat and lazy and distracted and frankly we need a hood shake. The media is already nervously starting the blitz spirit stuff but this isn’t 1979, we aren’t a nice homogenous country and when the power goes out, there’s not going to be all pulling together, people are going to go nuts.
So let’s get some cardio in. And then once the formation pitchfork display has panned out we can build more nuclear plants, decorate them with greens (I mean nice plant boughs of course) and get back on with life.
There is going to be epic levels of crime if the power goes out. Accelerate, I guess.
 
>Germany most afflicted
Not my problem. Elsewhere the situation is not dire like the NYT claims it is or it will be, but if they're really so concerned they could always send us LGBT books to burn.
 
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Best thing about this whole "blackouts" shit is we just have to pretend like the globohomos didn't blow their load early all over this scenario. Like so:
1670265564524.png
(Instagram post from Austria's Minister of Defense Klaudia Tanner - October 2021)
Klaudia Tanner said:
A Europe-wide power, infrastructure and supply failure is referred to as a "blackout" - it is a realistic and at the same time underestimated risk. Therefore, our goal is to improve the overall resilience of our republic. At a big event in Vienna, we brought this topic to the fore for 2,500 visitors with an impressive live performance!
Which, of course, the Lugenpresse was quick to dismiss as fake news or alarmist back then. Those same jornoscum are telling you now to stock up on candles, batteries and dance classes.

Also be sure not to notice the artificial shortage and driving up of the prices by the stubbornness with which the Eurocucks insist on shutting down all their nuclear plants.
 
Good,good, where there is no wood to burn, there will be burning politicians. I hope we get a very cold winter so we Europeans get a wake up call, we have been too comfortable and too complacent for a long while now and the governments have stolen almost every freedom we have. Every hardship we get is a much needed medicine in my opinion.
 
They probably wouldn't have managed but it was the plan. The last few years there has been a deliberate attempt to destroy the energy infrastructure in both the USA and Europe, it is weird if it happens solely due to the environmental death cult.

And in the last half year to year or so it's moved on full force to food! With just about every western country either doing or talking about severely limiting fertilizer use (for a literal "CLIMATE CHANGE!!1!" reasoning... seriously.. try figuring the argument out) some even talking about land buy backs and mandatory confiscations if not enough farmers willingly sell... Meanwhile we have multi nationals, billionaires and eco/green scum groups (with the help of millionaires, billionaires and investors/the market) all buying up huge amounts of farms and farm lands in places where short and mid term, buy backs and confiscations are unlikely. (see the USA) And as a nice bonus, a lot of said people buying it up are subscribers and pushers of the perpetually forecast, always wrong, global food shortages propaganda.
 
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