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Curve prices rise on the return of nuclear fears in France

The European electricity prices rose in the late morning of Wednesday due to concerns about possible corrosion at French reactor Civaux 2.

A spokesperson for EDF has said that the EDF is not responsible for any damage caused by its employees.

Inspection is underway

The utility has not yet received the results of the annual maintenance at Civaux 2. Markets were reminded three years ago of the corrosion that occurred in French reactors when production fell and required imports from Germany. Prices then rose.

By 0945 GMT the French baseload year-ahead was 7.6% higher at 67.6 Euros ($77.30).

All contracts in Germany rose across the board. German base for 2027 was up 5.9% and 80.4 euros, while the German base for year-ahead was up 3.1%.

On the spot market, a combination of a rising solar energy generation and softer demand brought down prices.

LSEG's analysis revealed that the growth of solar power in Germany's main producing country outweighed the decline in wind power. The increase in coal-to power production in Germany also exceeded a decrease in gas power in the local area.

The French baseload day-ahead price was down 7.1% at 26 euros/MWh.

The German baseload on Thursday fell 7.6% to 64 euros.

LSEG data revealed that the German wind power production will fall by 2.4 GW per day to 12.5 GW this Thursday.

The German solar power generation was projected to rise by 3 GW, to 20.8 GW.

The French nuclear capacity remained unchanged at 71%.

The demand for electricity in Germany will be down by 300 MW per day to 53.5 GW. In France, it is expected to rise by 100MW to 43.7GW. This leaves the total usage of the region at a lower level.

The temperature was expected to increase between 1 and 2,7 degrees Celsius until Thursday.

Warm temperatures usually boost the European carbon market as they require additional power to cool devices, which is often generated using carbon-intensive fossil energy sources.

The benchmark European carbon contract increased 2.6%, to 74.59 Euros per metric ton. European gas also firmed up.

(source: Reuters)