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Who’s Next in Line for a Major Power Outage?
Tracking the global energy crunch—and who’s losing power first.
Greetings, curious soul with an eye on tomorrow!
Electricity: invisible, essential—and suddenly missed the moment it’s gone. A blackout isn’t just a nuisance. It’s a red flag that the systems we rely on are stretched thin.
In this edition, we track the global energy crunch: who’s closest to the edge, what’s straining the grids, and where innovation is lighting the way. If you're thinking about where to live, invest, or stay powered—this matters.
Let’s dive into the data—and what it reveals.
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The U.S. has one of the world’s most advanced electric grids—yet it’s surprisingly brittle. From Texas’s snowstorm grid collapse to California’s wildfire-triggered shutoffs, even affluent states are revealing cracks under pressure.
⚡ Texas nearly experienced a total grid failure in 2021. While it’s since added solar and battery storage, its self-contained grid remains isolated from national support.
🌞 California boasts the highest solar capacity in the country, yet still leans on gas-fired plants during hot summer evenings when solar fades.
🏙️ Northeastern states face aging infrastructure, increased EV charging demand, and extreme weather—all testing grid resilience.
📊 Insight: In 2024, over two-thirds of North America faces “elevated” or “high” risk of power shortages, according to NERC (North American Electric Reliability Corp).

If you think flickering lights are annoying, imagine living with scheduled blackouts—every single day. In South Africa, “load-shedding” has become a household term.
🔥 State-run utility Eskom has struggled for years with underinvestment, maintenance failures, and political interference.
☀️ Private companies are stepping in with solar microgrids, especially in wealthier neighborhoods. Still, millions are left in the dark—literally and figuratively.
💡 A glimmer of hope: New reforms aim to decentralize the power sector and unlock private investment. But change is slow.
📉 Eye-opener: In 2023, South Africa endured power cuts on more than 300 days of the year.

Europe has made bold moves on climate and energy—but war, weather, and aging infrastructure have exposed fragilities.
🇩🇪 Germany shuttered its nuclear plants in 2023, relying more on wind and solar—though cloudy winters test reliability.
🇫🇷 France, usually an energy exporter, faced record outages from its nuclear fleet last year due to maintenance delays.
🇬🇧 The U.K. is a clean-energy leader but faces transmission bottlenecks—solar and wind power can’t always get where it’s needed most.
🌀 Surprise alert: In 2024, Ireland narrowly avoided blackouts due to a perfect storm of calm winds, high demand, and crypto-mining surges.

Australia is sun-soaked, tech-forward—and grappling with growing pains on its energy journey.
🌞 Over 3 million Aussie homes now have rooftop solar, one of the highest rates globally. But this flood of midday energy can overload parts of the grid.
🧯The 2022 closure of the Liddell coal station added pressure to an already tight system. The nation is racing to replace baseload capacity.
🔋 South Australia’s Big Battery has been a game-changer—but nationwide coordination is still a work in progress.
🔎 Unexpected stat: In 2023, South Australia ran on 100% renewables for 10+ consecutive days—but still needed imports during peak evenings.

India is booming—and so is its electricity demand. The challenge? Keeping up without shorting out.
💼 With one of the world’s fastest-growing middle classes, power use is skyrocketing—especially in urban centers.
🌞 Solar installations are expanding rapidly, yet coal still fuels 70% of electricity.
🔧 Rural regions face daily outages, while big cities are investing in “smart grid” tech to stabilize supply.
💰 Real-world impact: Power outages cost India an estimated $86 billion in GDP losses in 2022 alone, per the World Bank.

Latin America leans heavily on hydropower. But when the rain doesn’t fall, neither does electricity.
🇧🇷 Brazil sources over 60% of its electricity from dams. In 2021, drought nearly led to blackouts across São Paulo and Rio.
🇨🇱 Chile is fast becoming a clean energy leader, combining solar, wind, and battery storage in the Atacama desert.
🇲🇽 Mexico has taken a more cautious path, keeping fossil fuels in the mix—but its grid struggles in heatwaves, especially in the north.
🌦️ Impactful stat: A 1% drop in reservoir levels in Brazil can knock out enough power to serve 500,000 homes.

Home to 700+ million people, Southeast Asia is building fast—but grid modernization often lags behind.
🇻🇳 Vietnam added massive solar capacity in record time, but transmission lags caused blackouts even during sunny spells.
🇵🇭 The Philippines has a patchwork of mini-grids stretched across islands, making national coordination tough and outages frequent.
🇮🇩 Indonesia, still coal-reliant, is testing “green energy corridors” with international support—but rollout will take years.
🔌 Emerging solution: The ASEAN Power Grid initiative seeks to link national networks—but full integration is decades away.

Power isn’t just about keeping the fridge cold or the lights on. It’s about health, security, even national stability. And in an increasingly electric world—where everything from money to medicine depends on reliable power—understanding where the grid is weak is just smart planning.
Whether you’re considering where to retire, launch a business, or simply travel well-prepared, power resilience is an invisible force worth paying attention to.
Stay lit. Stay informed. And keep asking the right questions.
Warm regards,
Shane Fulmer
Founder, WorldPopulationReview.com
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