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Spot prices drop on weaker demand before the weekend

Spot prices drop on weaker demand before the weekend

The falling demand on the main European power markets Thursday lowered prompt prices. This was offset by a weak demand for electricity in advance of the weekend, despite a low wind generation in Germany.

The LSEG study also identified the rising solar production as a bearish factor.

At 0755 GMT the French baseload price for Friday was 66.3 euros (77.96 dollars) per megawatt-hour (MWH), down 6%.

The German equivalent day-ahead price was down 4.7% to 97.3 euros.

The power consumption in Germany will be reduced by 500 MW per day to 51.9 gigawatts on Friday. In France, the consumption is expected to drop 200 MW in that same time period to reach 42.2 GW.

LSEG data indicated that on the supply side of the equation, German wind energy output is expected to increase by 400 MW, to 6.0 GW. Solar generation will also likely grow by 1.7 GW in order to reach 15.0 GW.

The French nuclear capacity remained at 77%.

The curve shows that the German baseload contract for the year ahead increased by 0.8%, trading at 85.5 Euros, while its French counterpart was unchanged at 62.0 Euros.

The benchmark European carbon contract rose 0.7% to 69.86 euro per metric tonne.

A column discussed how global utilities produced a record amount clean electricity during the first half 2025 while reducing output of fossil fuels. This maintained the momentum for international efforts to reduce fossil energy use.

The International Energy Agency released its mid-year update on coal Thursday. It said that the global demand for coal is expected to remain unchanged in this year and next after reaching a record high of 8,8 billion tons by 2024. ($1 = 0.8504 euro) (Reporting and editing by Vijay Kishore, Vera Eckert)

(source: Reuters)