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Nuclear factors and demand in Germany are on the rise

Nuclear factors and demand in Germany are on the rise

The projections of a daily increase in demand in Germany on Tuesday boosted European prices for prompt power, while nuclear outages in France and Switzerland created short-term uncertainty regarding timely restarts.

According to LSEG Research, the higher wind generation volume and thermal availability weighed negatively.

By 8am GMT on Wednesday, the French baseload contract was 79 euros (92.33 dollars) per megawatt-hour (MWh), up 36.2% from the previous close. The German equivalent gained 6%, to 79.5 euros/MWh.

The power consumption in Germany will rise by 1.7 gigawatts to 53.1 GW, but in France it is expected to drop by 400 MW.

On a broader scale, the region including Switzerland and Austria saw a daily increase of 1.4 GW, to 110.3 GW.

The German wind energy output was forecast to increase by 2.9 GW, to 22.4 GW.

The Belleville 2 reactor in France went offline Monday afternoon due to faulty signals detected in the turbine control rooms located in the nonnuclear portion of the installation. Repair checks are currently underway, according to EDF, the operator.

The French nuclear capacity increased by 3 percentage points overnight to 75%.

The operator of Switzerland's largest reactor in Leibstadt said that the plant will be restarted in a controlled manner on Tuesday and Wednesday following a minor repair.

The load had already been reduced by 875MW since Friday.

The German baseload power for the year ahead was down by 0.4% to 85.2 euros/MWh. However, its French counterpart was not traded after closing at 62.2 euro.

The benchmark European carbon contract fell 0.4%, to 68.92 euro per metric ton. It had traded mainly in the 70-72 euros range last week.

Veyt, a consultancy, saw the market trading sideways in this week's report but noted that there was some downward pressure due to higher wind speeds expected for late July which favor low-carbon energy generation. (Reporting and editing by Susan Fenton, Vera Eckert, Forrest Crellin)

(source: Reuters)