This is the question that determines everything: how long do I need to be able to take care of myself? The answer is uncomfortable — but important.
Normal Power Outages vs. a Real Blackout
A normal power outage after a storm or technical fault: minutes to a few hours. Everyone has experienced that. No major preparation needed for that.
A real large-scale blackout is fundamentally different. It’s not just one line that fails — the entire interconnected grid collapses. Restoration is exponentially more difficult.
Why the Power Grid Is So Hard to Restore
The European interconnected grid is highly complex. A restart after total collapse — known as a “black start” — takes hours to days, even if no further damage has occurred.
The problem: power plants need electricity to start up. This must come from special “black start-capable” plants that can start themselves. Then more and more plants and grid sections must be synchronized step by step — it’s like assembling a giant puzzle.
According to German grid operators: a controlled restart of the German grid takes 24–72 hours under ideal conditions.
What If There Is Damage?
If transformers, substations, or lines are physically damaged — through sabotage, natural disaster, or cyberattack — the duration extends dramatically:
- Large transformers have delivery times of 12–18 months
- There are very few replacement units in stock worldwide
- Specialists for these repairs are scarce
The BBK (Germany’s Federal Office of Civil Protection) plans for outages of up to 4 weeks in its worst-case scenarios.
Historical Comparisons
| Event | Duration | Cause |
|---|---|---|
| Puerto Rico Hurricane Maria (2017) | 11 months in parts | Infrastructure damage |
| North America Ice Storm (1998) | 5–25 days regionally | Line damage |
| Texas Winter Storm (2021) | 4–7 days | Infrastructure failure |
| Europe Near-Collapse (2006) | Minutes (averted) | Cascade effect |
| Ukraine Cyberattack (2015) | 1–6 hours regionally | Hacker attack |
What Does This Mean for Your Preparation?
The realistic scenarios:
- Technical fault with no damage: 24–72 hours → basic supplies are sufficient
- More complex outage with partial damage: 1–2 weeks → extended supplies needed
- Severe infrastructure damage: weeks to months → long-term preparation required
The BBK recommends: a supply for 10 days as a minimum standard. This covers all realistic short-term scenarios.
The Right Preparation for Each Scenario
Basic (72 hours): Water supply, food, flashlight, power bank
Extended (10 days): All of the above + camp stove, water filter, hand-crank radio
Long-term (4+ weeks): All of the above + balcony solar panel, larger supplies, extended first aid kit
👉 Blackout Checklist: Be Optimally Prepared →
👉 Balcony Solar Panel: Generate Your Own Power →
👉 Emergency Backpack: Fully Equipped for Any Blackout →