Around 450,000 households in southern France were without power on Friday, operator Enedis said, a day after a storm tore through the region, ripping up trees and flooding roads.
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High winds and hard rain brought chaos across southern France
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Northern Spain and parts of Portugal hit hard
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Storm Nils forces cancellations of flights, trains and ferries and disruption on roads
French officials said a truck driver was killed when a tree smashed through his windscreen, while dozens were injured in weather-related incidents in Spain and a viaduct in Portugal partially collapsed because of flooding.
La tempête Nils fait déborder la Garonne et tue une personne, 900.000 foyers privés d'électricité https://t.co/enl7ZjXH5j pic.twitter.com/mgv6kO207R
— Arnaud Mercier – #Entrepreneur (@arnaudmercier) February 13, 2026
French forecasters said the storm, named Nils, was “unusually strong” and France’s electricity distributor said it had mobilised around 3,000 as it battled to reconnect households to the grid.
“Enedis has restored service to 50 percent of the 900,000 customers who were without electricity,” it wrote around 6:00 am (0500 GMT).
️ Tempête Nils : 450.000 foyers toujours sans électricité
On fait le point dans le journal de @MatthieuKarmann|#BonjourLaMatinaleTF1 présentée par @Bruce_Toussaint pic.twitter.com/6tJhbpOvPD— TF1Info (@TF1Info) February 13, 2026
“Flooding complicates repairs because the fields are waterlogged and some roads are blocked,” Enedis crisis director Herve Champenois said during a press briefing on Thursday.
Residents across the south of France were shocked at the storm’s ferocity.Â
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” Ingrid, a florist in the city of Perpignan, told AFP. “A tree almost fell on my car — two seconds more and it would have.”

“During the night, you could hear tiles lifting, rubbish bins rolling down the street — it was crazy,” said Eugenie Ferrier, 32, from the village of Roaillan near Bordeaux in the southwest.
Forecasters said the storm had moved eastwards away from French territory during Thursday, though some areas were still on alert for flooding.
