Sacré bleu! Macron blames renewables for Spain’s blackouts, France drops renewables targets, expands nuclear

Europe’s energy debate is shifting. After Spain’s major blackout, even long-time advocates of aggressive renewable targets are questioning whether power systems can rely so heavily on wind and solar without sacrificing stability.

Climate Intelligence (Clintel) is an independent foundation informing people about climate change and climate policies.

Emanuel Macron (Source: Shutterstock)

Jo Nova
Date: 14 February 2026

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The world is backing away from renewables

Wow. What a turnaround. President Macron, a man of The Blob, has come right out and blamed the Spanish Blackouts on renewables.  No system, he says, can be so dependent on renewables. Everyone knew this, but few in power would say the words.

Back in 2017 this was the man who had a plan to shut down 14 nuclear reactors in France. Today he plans to push through a law to reverse that. At the same time, the current French renewable energy targets have just been dropped by 20%. Instead of building 150GW of unreliable power, the new target will be about 120GW.

Back in April, Spain finally celebrated 100% renewable  energy, and within days suffered a national blackout  that caused at least five deaths and left thousands without lighting and the internet, and panic-buying petrol and food. The blackout spread as far as Portugal and Southern France.

Macron blames renewable energy for Spain’s national blackout

— By Kieran Kelly, The Telegraph

French president says European neighbour’s deadly power cuts were caused by shift towards net zero

In response to a large-scale power cut that left millions in the dark in April, the French president said no country could rely so heavily on renewable energy.

But Mr Macron said: “The Spanish power outage is not related to interconnections, but rather to the fact that no system, at least with current technology, can support such dependence on renewable energy. Stability in the energy mix is needed because otherwise, shocks that are too big occur. But it’s not just about interconnections. Networks are needed.”

Spain generates about 60 per cent of its electricity from renewable sources, including wind, hydropower and solar power, according to Red Eléctrica de España, its electricity grid operator. Around 20 per cent comes from nuclear power plants.

Supposedly renewable energy is free and nuclear plants are wildly expensive.

If renewables were cheaper, France would know — yet France chooses the nukes.

The French rebirth of nuclear power started a few years ago. But the plan to close these power plants still needs to be expunged.

Spain is aiming for 80% renewables by 2030 and the UK Labour government is aiming for 95% “clean”. But Australia is larger, hotter, and more sparsely populated, with tons of coal and gas, and has no interconnector cables to anywhere, yet we’re aiming for 82%. Fifty shades of crazy.

Climate Intelligence (Clintel) is an independent foundation informing people about climate change and climate policies.

This article was published previously on joannenova.com.au

Jo Nova

Jo Nova is science presenter, writer, speaker & former TV host; author of The Skeptic’s Handbook.

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