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Iberdrola invests €100m to redesign Valencia’s weather-torn distribution grid

Iberdrola invests €100m to redesign Valencia’s weather-torn distribution grid

Iberdrola chairman Ignacio Galán during one of his visits to the affected area to assess the situation of the affected networks. Image courtesy Iberdrola.

Global utility giant Iberdrola has announced a €100 million ($103.9 million) investment to redesign the power grid affected by the severe weather in Valencia.

The investment will be made through the company’s il.lumina project, which will redesign the distribution grid, affected by the October 29 weather event.

Iberdrola began the different phases of the project at the end of 2024, with the recovery of the 132kV high voltage infrastructure in the Catadau and Carlet area and has already gathered all the material necessary to carry out the project. The project will focus on the transformation centres, the low and medium voltage grid, as well as substations.

Iberdrola plans to reach 90% of the project’s execution in 2025 and to complete it in 2026.

Commenting in a release was CEO of Iberdrola España, Mario Ruiz-Tagle: “Although the company, despite enormous difficulties, was able to get practically all electricity back online in under 72 hours, our priority now is to look to the future and to have an even more efficient distribution grid.”

Iberdrola has created a team of 35 people who are dedicated exclusively to the il.lumina project, which is divided into five operational areas under the same management and has seven support areas to coordinate the work of the approximately 1,000 contractors.

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Said Ruiz-Tagle: “…The agile performance of the more than 500 workers mobilised from different parts of Spain and the investment in grid technology we’ve made in recent years were decisive in those exceptional circumstances”.

Eva Mancera, CEO of i-DE, Iberdrola’s distribution company, said that electricity was brought back online in record time after the floods thanks to human and technical resources.

Mancera said that this new grid “will be even more robust and resilient, prepared for extreme phenomena that may occur in the future and will be implemented in a few months thanks to the creation of a specific project team that will allow i-DE to continue developing the rest of its investments in the Valencia region.”

Iberdrola rebuilding the grid in Valencia

To build the electricity distribution grid of the future, Iberdrola says that they will incorporate resilience measures into infrastructures that involve design changes in assets and will equip them with the latest digitalisation standards. These will benefit 650,000 customers, all in coordination with the actions carried out by public administrations.

The level of installation automation will be increased and new smart transformers (i-trafo) will be incorporated, which will improve supply quality, overhead power lines will be buried, and transformer substations will be raised and compacted.

To minimise disruption in the municipalities where work is already underway, Iberdrola adds that i-DE has improved scheduled outage notifications and is implementing special measures like the installation of generators and night-time work.

In addition, the agreement between the company and the Valencian Government, through the Regional Ministry of Innovation and Industry, continues to be in force.

Under the agreement, the company is working with the Valencian Metallurgical Business Federation (FEMEVAL) to send brigades of electrical installers to the buildings and private homes affected by the severe weather event. These brigades are responsible for checking and repairing electrical installations and checking electrical panels, as well as addressing any needs that may arise in towns to restore public lighting.

October’s extreme weather

The weather on 29 October in the province of Valencia resulted in approximately 180,000 customers losing electricity in l’Horta Sud, Catadau-Carlet and Requena-Utiel-Buñol.

According to Iberdrola, from the outset, i-DE mobilised approximately 500 people from both Valencia and other regions in the rest of Spain to restore service and repair the affected installations as soon as they could access them.

More than 200 people travelled from outside the province of Valencia on the first day, in-house and contractors, to provide support both in the field and to reinforce and relieve the staff operating the control centres, who had been cut off.

The company’s action and mobilisation of resources, including the installation of more than 120 generators, made it possible to recover approximately half of affected electricity supply in 24 hours, 85% within 48 hours and in just over 72 hours practically everything had been restored.

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