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Reduced German renewable supply boosts spot prices

The price of European prompt electricity rose on Wednesday, as lower wind and sun output was forecast for Germany's main market. Demand increased in the region due to the cold temperatures.

At 0945 GMT, the German power day-ahead was up 7.4% at 152 Euros ($158.20 per megawatt-hour).

The French baseload rate for the day ahead rose 1.7% to 146 euros/MWh.

According to LSEG, Germany's wind power production fell by 5.1 gigawatts to 11.6 GW. Solar generation also dropped to 2.7 GW compared to 4.8 GW.

The French nuclear availability was unchanged at 81%, after losing two percentage points the day before.

On Thursday, Germany's power consumption is expected to rise by 0.3 GW. In France, the demand should increase by the same amount.

The average temperature in both countries is in the positive low degrees Celsius range.

The German baseload for the year ahead was almost unchanged at 96.7 Euros/MWh. However, the French position was not traded after it settled at 69.0 Euros/MWh.

The benchmark contract for 2025 on the European carbon market fell 1.1% to 80.05 euros per metric tonne.

The VDMA said that the orders of German equipment and plant manufacturers grew a little in the last month of the year due to large contracts from overseas, but the year 2024 overall marked the second consecutive year of decline.

LSEG data shows that the gas-fired generation in January was the highest since 2022. This is a jump of more than 10% compared to January 2024.

The price of gas in the region has risen to its highest level since early 2023. This could lead some people to switch from gas to coal. ($1 = 0.9608 euro) (Reporting and editing by Vijay Kishore, Vera Eckert)

(source: Reuters)