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InterRAO, a Russian energy company, says that electricity exports will fall by 4% in this year due to lower supplies to China

InterRAO, a Russian energy company, says that electricity exports will fall by 4% in this year due to lower supplies to China

The head of the state-owned energy company InterRAO stated that Russian electricity exports have fallen by around 4% this year due to a large drop in supplies going to China. He also predicted that the amount would fall by the exact same amount by 2025.

InterRAO's total exports fell by 17.6% to 8,53 billion kilowatt hours in 2024. The decline in exports was caused by the Russian Far East's power system restrictions, which reduced exports to China.

Kazakhstan will account for 54% of Russia’s electricity exports by 2024. This makes it the largest export market.

"As at mid-June total electricity exports had decreased by about 4%. The main reason for this is the decrease in exports from China. We expect that export volumes will remain high in Kazakhstan and Mongolia," InterRAO chief Sergei Dregval said to reporters.

He said: "We expect exports to be the same this year, minus 4%."

Dregval stated that future export volumes will depend on a number of factors, including the domestic and international electricity price and the rouble's exchange rate.

Dregval stated that exports to China had dropped by 44% from the beginning of 2025. He attributed the decline to the export restrictions caused by the surge in electricity demand in Russia's Far East, and the shortage of hydroelectric resources in the eastern reservoirs.

InterRAO estimates that electricity exports from China to China will be lower than 2024 levels this year, due to the ongoing constraints.

Dregval, who also owns assets in Russia as well as abroad, said that the company expects its Russian assets' electricity production to increase by 1-2% between 2025 and 2025.

He added that the production in Russia will reach 65 billion kilowatt hours during the first half of this year. This is 2% more than the previous year. (Reporting and Anastasia Lyrchikova, Writing by Maxim Rodionov, Editing by Mark Trévelyan).

(source: Reuters)