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Utilities win contracts at Poland's 2030 Capacity Market Auction

Grid operator PSE announced that Poland's main capacity market auction was completed on Wednesday. The closing prices ranged between 465.03 and 511.51 Zlotys ($128.74?and $141.61) for a kilowatt of power per year. PGE, Poland's largest state-controlled utility, said it had secured 1,399.218 Megawatts of capacity obligations. This included 1,097.718MW under 15-year contracts.

PGE announced earlier that it would be submitting?its planned power plants powered by gas to the auction but didn't disclose the outcome of those specific projects. Energa is another major Polish utility that won contracts with a mix of one-year and 7-year terms. Enea won a total of 661 MW in one-year contracts, the company said. Tauron, a state-controlled company, estimated that the total revenue could range between 3.83 billion and 4.22 billion Zlotys in 2030-2046. Tauron announced in a separate filing that it would construct a 600-MW gas-fired plant in Jaworzno, southern Poland, after securing?capacity agreements. It said that the plant would cost between 2 and 3 million Polish zlotys for each?MW.

Poland is reducing its dependence on coal and using capacity markets to encourage investment. The mechanism helps conventional power plants to produce electricity in times of low intermittent renewable generation. However, under current EU rules, payments for sources with high emissions are "set to be prohibited from 2028." Warsaw called for the creation of a new EU-supported mechanism in order to prevent a power gap that could occur from 2029.

(source: Reuters)