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French spot is above pre-holiday indicators but the short-term outlook is bearish

French spot is above pre-holiday indicators but the short-term outlook is bearish

The European electricity price was expected to fall over the remainder of the week, as a surplus of thermal energy more than offset the rising demand. Renewables were also less available after the holiday weekend.

Marcus Eriksson, LSEG analyst said: "With improved thermal we expect a slashing of the highest price day-on-day and an overall bearish outlook."

By 0815 GMT, the French baseload day-ahead traded at 64.41 euros per megawatt hour.

The average price of the current week was 48 euros.

Germany's baseload day-ahead position has not traded. Four-day delivery Friday, meaning Tuesday, closed at 95 Euros.

The French nuclear capacity was 69%, an increase of 2% over Monday but still below the 72% on April 17.

Data from the operator EDF revealed that Flamanville 3 started producing power again on Sunday, after an outage lasting more than two month due to issues with equipment at facility.

On Wednesday, the German wind power production fell by 400 megawatts and reached 2.8 gigawatts in France.

As businesses reopen after Easter, the demand for electricity is expected to increase in both countries.

In Germany, the consumption on Wednesday increased by 1.8 GW compared to yesterday's 54.6 GW and in France it rose by 400 MW compared to yesterday's 48.1 GW.

German baseload for the year ahead was offered at 82.2 Euros/MWh, after closing at 83.25 euros on April 18. After closing Friday at 60.50 euros, French baseload for 2026 was not traded. $1 = 0.8694 euro (Reporting and editing by Kirby Donovan, Forrest Crellin; Additional reporting by Vera Eckert)

(source: Reuters)