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Demand eases, resulting in a narrowing of the spread between spot prices

Demand eases, resulting in a narrowing of the spread between spot prices

The spread between French and German power prices has narrowed on Tuesday. German prices have fallen due to lower consumption estimates, while French contracts have benefited from a decrease in nuclear supply.

Naser Hashemi, LSEG analyst, says that the lower wind power supply in Germany was more than offset by the weaker demand.

The French baseload electricity for Wednesday at 0740 GMT was 36.5 Euros ($41.60 per megawatt-hour), 37.7% higher than its closing price on Monday.

The German equivalent contract was down 18.3% at 73.5 Euros, but still more than twice as high as its French counterpart.

LSEG data indicated that the German wind power production was expected to drop by 1.4 gigawatts on Wednesday to 3.9 GW.

The French nuclear capacity has fallen three percentage points since Monday, to 60%. This is eight points below the level of last week.

The Leibstadt nuclear power plant in Switzerland closed on Monday for a 4-week maintenance period.

The demand trended down well ahead of Thursday's May Day holiday. This is followed by an inter-day that many businesses take off.

The German power usage is expected to drop by 800 megawatts per day by Wednesday, to 53.4 GW. In France, the demand is predicted to fall by 2.2 GW at 41.4 GW.

The German baseload power for the year ahead fell by 1.5%, to 79.1 Euros/MWh. In France, it was not traded after closing at 60.1 Euros.

The benchmark contract on the European carbon markets was down by 1.6%, at 64.24 Euros per metric ton.

The German regulator announced on Monday that an additional 6,493MW of electricity capacity would be required to maintain grid stability in Germany in winter 2025/2026. This is 7% lower than the requirement in the previous winter.

The communication stated that the regulator is expecting to receive expressions of interest from foreign plant operators by mid-May.

(source: Reuters)