
On August 28, power failed in London, creating disasterous traffic and transportation chaos in the British capital. Italy itself had some partial outages in June.
Black out in italy series#
Sunday's blackout marks the latest in a series of major power cuts to hit Europe. There was, however, no disruption of supplies on the Island of Sardinia. The cuts hit the Italian mainland and the island of Sicily. By mid-morning, they succeeded in doing so, according to Guido Bertolas, the head of Italy’s civil protection services. The incident highlights Italy's limited capacity for generating its own power.Īs energy officials sought to find answers explaining Italy's worst blackout in a decade, police and other civic authorities sought to bring the country back under control. One line coming in from Switzerland appeared to be knocked out after a tree fell on it, but officials said it was unlikely a single event could trigger the failure of Italy’s entire power grid. Italian officials blamed the brownout on the breakdown of electricity lines coming in from France, Switzerland and Austria – all countries from which energy-hungry Italy imports power. In Southern Tyrol, one train even had to be pulled out of an alpine tunnel, and outages stopped train traffic between the heavily trafficked border sectors to Switzerland.īy Sunday afternoon, however, power was gradually being restored across the country. As many as 30,000 people were stranded as electricity powered trains ground to a halt. Other than in a few isolated pockets, power went out across the entire country, virtually at the same time in a blackout that lasted nearly five hours and affected most of Italy’s 57 million residents. Hospitals were able to continue operating thanks to emergency generators. Those above ground were left to walk home or try their luck on one of the desperately overcrowded buses plying the city. "We don't know anything, power's gone off across Italy but we don't know why or how long we're going to have to sit here," one reveler told Deutsche Welle. But most of them took the blackout in stride.

The city's subway came to complete standstill, leaving hundreds of people stranded underground.

The lights went out at around 3:30am, and the "White Night" became virtually pitch black. More than a million people were out celebrating Rome's first "White Night" party, an all-night cultural extravaganza with museums and restaurants due to stay open till dawn. The Italian capital - normally a sea of lights - plunged into darkness early Sunday morning, as a five-hour blackout struck most of Italy.
