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European utilities fall on the talk of EU emission trading changes

By Danilo Masoni

MILAN, February 12 - European utilities plunged on Thursday following a'sharp decline in carbon prices, after suggestions that the EU intervene in the markets, a move which?investors feared could squeeze the sector's earnings.

Europe's benchmark "carbon" contract fell to its lowest levels since August, after leaders in countries such as Germany and Italy suggested that the European Union consider revising the bloc’s emissions trading system.

Luca 'Moro is the CIO of SpesX - an Italian fund that focuses on energy transition. He said: "If this message gains traction, then those who have been speculating and?buying a green certificate are recognizing there could be a dilution in front."

If CO2 credits fall, electricity prices will drop. Generators lose money when prices of power drop.

The European utilities index fell by around 2% last year, reducing some of the gains made this year. The STOXX broader index rose by 0.4%.

RWE in Germany, A2A and Enel in Italy, Fortum Finland, Verbund Austria and Orsted Denmark were among the worst performers, with all falling between 2.4% to 6.4%.

In recent months, utilities and renewables stocks have been boosted by the expectation that they would benefit from a rise in power demand related to artificial intelligence infrastructure. However, the prospect of changes in emission rules could complicate the outlook.

You have two forces at work: Deregulation tends?to push down power prices, while the?build-out of data-centres tends?to push them up. Moro said that the question is, which will win out first?

LSEG data revealed that the benchmark EU carbon permit contract fell by?6.5% last year, to 73.35 Euro per metric tonne of CO2.

The ETS is a key tool in EU climate policy. The ETS requires that industrial sites and power plants purchase CO2 permits to offset their emissions. It also caps the number of allowances available, which tightens over time in order to encourage reductions. (Reporting and editing by Dhara Raasinghe; Danilo Masoni)

(source: Reuters)