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The German wind energy supply nearly doubles, lowering the spot price

German spot electricity prices fell sharply Thursday, as the wind power supply was forecast to double in Germany and demand to decline.

At 09:29 GMT, the German baseload contract for Friday had fallen 39.1% to 48.75 Euros per Megawatt Hour (MWH).

The French equivalent contract increased by 133.3% to 21 euros/MWh as the renewable production in France is expected to fall and nuclear power is less available.

According to LSEG analyst Florine Engl, residual load in Germany is expected to decrease on Friday as a result of a significant increase in wind energy supply. Exports are also expected into the evening.

Data compiled by LSEG shows that the German wind output will jump to 31.9 GW this Friday, while France's supply is expected to drop 1.6 GW to 7.5 GW.

The data also showed that the German solar power production has increased by 1.1 GW to 14.3 GW.

The mix of power generated in Europe is likely to become dirtier this summer, after a prolonged dry spell has depleted the reservoirs and reduced hydro-electricity production.

The French nuclear capacity has fallen by two percentage points, to 67%.

LSEG data showed that power usage in Germany will drop by 210 Megawatts (MW), to 52.9 GW. In France, demand is expected to fall by 950 MW, to 42.2 GW.

The German power contract for the year ahead was up 1.4%, at 88.80 Euros/MWh. In France, 2026 baseload contracts were untraded and had a range of bid-ask between 62.50 Euros/MWh to 63.50Euros/MWh.

The benchmark European carbon permits increased 0.7%, to 73.16 Euros per metric ton.

The International Energy Agency reported on Thursday that despite geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty, clean energy investments will drive global energy investment to a record level of $3.3 trillion by 2025. (Reporting and editing by Forrest Crellin)

(source: Reuters)