Electricity

Power prices reach stunning EUR 400 per MWh in Europe

Power prices stunning EUR 400 MWh Europe

Photo: iStock

Published

December 20, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

December 20, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Power prices reached critical levels across Europe amid a surge in costs for natural gas and an outage in France.

Europe is faced with the possibility of another domino effect in energy, similar to the one that happened during the winter of 2016-17 that led to a spike in power prices.

Specifically, last week French EDF announced four nuclear reactors would have to stay offline as a result of emergency maintenance, which means the country’s electric power system will have reduced capacity until mid-January.

France is traditionally an electricity exporter in Europe, but now the country already needs increased imports to cover internal demand. On Monday, 11.8 GW of electricity was being imported into France from Germany and Belgium, a very telling number for what may follow.

On the same day, Poland’s power price in the day-ahead market increased by 110% to EUR 344 per MWh.

The change in France’s role in the European electricity system has created the possibility of a domino effect, as other countries face reduced imports and rising prices. It already happened during the winter of 2016-17, when France had many nuclear plants in maintenance, but now it may occur at a time with already very high power and gas prices.

New records for power prices across Europe

According to levels at national energy exchanges and European platform EEX, wholesale prices of electricity jumped to new highs. For Tuesday, the price is at over EUR 400 per MWh for France, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, Italy and Slovakia.

As for Bulgaria and Greece, the price stands at EUR 342, the lowest among countries covered by the Energy Live platform. In Serbia, the price is EUR 396 and in Romania it is at EUR 395 per MWh.

Natural gas reserves fall below 60% early in season

Natural gas is the primary contributor to a surge in electricity prices. It is estimated that around 80% of the increase is attributed to gas and the rise in CO2 prices makes up for the remainder, which points to the importance of the volume of gas in European underground storage.

The levels were not replenished adequately during the summer season. Winter storage capacity utilization began with 67.5% on December 1 and now it is below 60%, a level that is normally reached in January. If the winter is harsher than usual, it may drop to a critically low level by February or March.

The energy market seems to have priced in the fact in the month-ahead contracts for electricity, which are higher for February than for January in major countries, such as Germany and France.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

CJR Renewables 102 MW Urleasca wind farm Romania

CJR Renewables completes construction of 102 MW Urleasca wind farm in Romania

09 October 2025 - The Urleasca wind farm in Brăila county in eastern Romania is complete, contractor CJR Renewables said

slovenia coal phaseout coal mine velenje golob robert visit

Slovenia begins preparations for closure of Velenje coal mine

09 October 2025 - Slovenian Prime Minister Robert Golob visited the Velenje coal mine to present a draft law on its gradual closure

Metlen Karatzis Greece largest battery joint venture

Karatzis, Metlen to install Greece’s largest battery in joint venture

09 October 2025 - Metlen and Karatzis Group of Companies are establishing a joint venture for a standalone BESS of 330 MW and 790 MWh

world dnv energy transition energy transition outlook 2025

Policy changes in US will have marginal impact on global energy transition

09 October 2025 - AI energy use may seem alarming, but it is projected to stay below EV charging and the cooling of buildings, DNV calculated