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German spot prices increase slightly, French fall greatly

European timely power prices diverged in the major markets on Wednesday, with German levels increasing on expectations for lower solar power output and French costs dropping on weaker neighboring need.

German baseload power for Thursday was 2.8% up at 92.5 euros ($ 101.07) per megawatt hour (MWh at 0830 GMT), LSEG information showed.

French day-ahead baseload was 26.3% down at 29.5 euros/MWh.

German solar energy output was predicted at 11.4 gigawatts ( GW) on Thursday, down by 1.3 GW day-on-day.

French nuclear availability remained at 76% of available capacity. France was normally amongst countries with improved thermal accessibility, LSEG research study stated.

On the need side, power consumption in Germany was expected to lose 800 MW day-on-day to reach 53.1 GW and usage in France should go down by 1.1 GW to 42.1 GW in the exact same duration.

Meteorologists forecast changeable but warm summer weather in the coming days and increasing temperatures once again from the weekend onwards, generally in southerly parts of the region.

Looking ahead into next week, temperatures in France might average 24.2 degrees Celsius compared to present levels at 19.7 degrees, raising power need for air conditioning systems.

Further ahead on the curve, German year-ahead baseload relieved by 0.4% at 93.95 euros/MWh.

The French comparable, Cal '25 shed 1.1% at 79.7 euros.

European CO2 allowances for December 2024 expiry nudged down 0.3% to 69.73 euros a metric lot.

Germany's Siemens Energy raised its complimentary capital outlook for the 2nd time in 3 months, citing more powerful demand for its power grid innovation and gas turbines as the group recovers from a major crisis at its wind department.

(source: Reuters)