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Government issues stark advice of what to do in the case of UK-wide power cuts

Published 15:04 18 Dec 2025 GMT

Updated 15:07 18 Dec 2025 GMT

Lum Haliti
Government issues stark advice of what to do in the case of UK-wide power cuts

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It's very serious

If a long-lasting nationwide power cut happens, you will be told to use your pillowcases, coffee filter papers or bed sheets to make water safe and drinkable.

In fact, householders will also be urged to eat chilled or defrosted food first before tins, cook on camping stoves in their back garden.

According to public health advice from the UK’s chief medical officers, you should also prioritise family members for nutrition.

For the first time, the Government has published scripts that would be read out in the event of a national blackout.

There are concerns among experts who say that the public needs to be better prepared for such an eventuality, even though the Government has said that the prospect of a national power outage is “very unlikely.”

Battery or solar radios are considered the most reliable way to receive information from the Government in this extreme scenario, since the power cut would most likely make mobile and internet communications not function.

Political leaders in the UK and Europe have warned about the increasing probability of war with Russia, which is why these concerns have been raised.

And the risk of power cuts could be increased by cyber attacks or power surges from the increasing activity of AI data centres, according to the UK Government’s own risk register and chronic risk analysis documents.

People would be urged to listen for updates through battery or solar-powered radios, in the event of a nationwide outage.

The advice says that everyone in the country would lose their mains electricity supply “instantaneously and possibly without warning”, except those that have back-up generators.

The Department of Health document says that “this could also lead to the loss of mobile and internet communications, water, sewage removal and treatment, fuel, gas and the ability to make electronic payments, which would cause significant and widespread disruption and risk to health.”

People are also advised to visit the Government’s Prepare website now for practical advice on how to deal with a power cut.

“In the unlikely scenario of a national power outage, communicating health advice to the public would be challenging because phone, internet and television services would be disrupted”, the advice says.

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