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French spot prices jump on anticipated heatwave

French spot prices jump on anticipated heatwave

The French spot electricity price increased sharply on Friday as the demand for power is expected to rise in France because of an anticipated heatwave and in Germany, as the half the country returns to work after the Corpus Christi holidays.

At 8:32 GMT, the French baseload contract for Friday had increased by 27.8% to 65.50 Euros per Megawatt Hour (MWH).

The German equivalent contract was not traded.

Riccardo Paraviero, LSEG analyst, says that the price signal for Friday in Germany is bullish, as residual load will increase significantly with demand expected to rebound and wind supply to plummet.

Data compiled by LSEG shows that the German wind energy output will drop to 4.8 GW this Friday. In France, it is estimated to be down 630 Megawatts, to 3.1 GW.

The data revealed that German solar power production has increased by 1.2 GW to 21 GW.

The French nuclear availability dropped by two percentage points, to 67%. This was due to planned and unplanned shutdowns that took out two reactors.

Operator EDF stated in an online message that the Paluel 2 nuclear reactor was shut down early on Thursday morning for a fix to a problem with a fusebox outside of the nuclear area.

Data compiled by LSEG shows that power usage in Germany will increase 3 GW following the partial holiday in western Germany, and demand in France will rise 1.3 GW to 47.6 GW.

Meteo France, the state forecaster, has issued heatwave alerts. Usually, higher temperatures mean more cooling demand.

The German power contract for the year ahead was up by 0.5% to 93.25 Euros/MWh. However, the French baseload contract for 2026 was not traded after it closed at 66.65 Euros/MWh.

Benchmark European carbon permits fell 0.1%, to 74.52 Euros per metric ton.

A report released by the energy think tank Ember on Thursday showed that Europe's top data centres are facing a major change as developers will move to wherever the connection times are fastest, unless more proactive planning is done for electricity grids. Forrest Crellin reported. Mark Potter (Editing)

(source: Reuters)