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The German spot falls due to more wind and solar, while the French spot rises with temperature.

The German spot falls due to more wind and solar, while the French spot rises with temperature.

On Wednesday, European wholesale electricity prices were mixed. France's position gained on warmer weather forecasts while Germany's dropped under pressure from increased renewable energy production.

Riccardo Paraviero, LSEG analyst, stated that France would not only see a rise in demand due to another hot spell, but also a slight reduction of its nuclear capacity.

He added that the German market would benefit from stable consumption and an increase in wind and solar energy supplies.

By 8am GMT, the price of French baseload electricity for Thursday had risen by 49.2% to 91.0 euros (105.71 dollars) per megawatt-hour (MWh).

The German contract, which was 94.2 euros less than the French equivalent, maintained a premium.

LSEG data put French demand for electricity on Thursday at 46 gigawatts, 500 MW more than Wednesday. They also predicted a temperature increase of 1.7 degrees Celsius in France to 23.8 degrees.

German consumption, on the contrary, is likely to fall daily by 900MW, or 52.0GW.

The hot weather can lead to a reduction in the amount of water available for cooling thermal power plants and a decrease in hydro-generation.

The French nuclear availability dropped two percentage points, to 80% of the installed capacity.

The day-ahead forecast showed that German wind power would rise to 15.5 GW, up from 10.3 GW, and German solar power will increase by 1 GW, to 13.6 GW.

The German baseload power contract for the year ahead was up 0.4% at 87.1 Euro/MWh, while the French equivalent contracts closed untraded at 64.8 euro.

The price of crude oil was boosted by the expectation of a strong summer demand from the United States and China. However, gains were limited by the caution expressed by analysts about the economy as a whole.

The benchmark contract on the European carbon markets was down 0.5% at 71.2 Euros per metric ton. $1 = 0.8609 Euros (Reporting and Editing by Louise Heavens, Vera Eckert)

(source: Reuters)