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Prices rise on tighter supply of nuclear and renewable energy

The French power price increased on Tuesday as a result of a tighter supply and reduced availability of wind and solar power in Europe, while Germany's position was untraded but bid higher.

Riccardo Paraviero, LSEG analyst, said: "Tomorrow, the outlook is bullish to sideways, with a main signal coming from falling solar power supplies."

The French baseload contract for Wednesday had risen by 2.9% to 45 euros ($52.03), while the German equivalent was offered at 79 euros/MWh after closing at 77.3 euros.

The French nuclear capacity has decreased by two percentage points in the last week, to 78%.

The Goesgen Nuclear Plant in Switzerland has extended its outage by nearly three weeks. It is now scheduled to end on the 22nd of August.

LSEG data shows that the German wind power production is predicted to decline by 200 MW per day to 17 gigawatts on Wednesday and in France, it is anticipated to drop 500 MW to 3.5 GW.

The data indicated that Germany's solar generation was likely to fall to 13.8 GW compared to 15.1 GW. This would override a 500 MW increase in France, which reached 4.8 GW during the same time period.

In France, power consumption is expected to drop by 200 MW to 42.4 GW.

The German baseload for the year ahead increased by 1.3% to 85.6 euros/MWh. In France, there was a range from just below 60 euros up to 62.4, with a final price of 61.7 euros.

The benchmark contract on the European carbon markets increased by 0.2%, to 70.77 Euros per metric ton.

A budget draft obtained showed that Germany intends to reduce energy costs by 42 billion euro for consumers and business between 2026 and 2030 by drawing from a government fund.

Utility Uniper has warned that it expects its half-year earnings to fall significantly. This is ahead of an extensive presentation on August 7. $1 = 0.8648 Euros (Reporting and editing by Harikrishnan Nair).

(source: Reuters)