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Spot prices are affected by the forecast of higher renewables and a weaker demand

Spot prices are affected by the forecast of higher renewables and a weaker demand

On Thursday, prompt electricity prices in Europe's wholesale market fell amid forecasts of increased renewable energy generation and a softer demand.

"The signal for Germany is bearish, driven by a decrease in consumption and a noticeable rise in wind- and solar-supply," said LSEG Analyst Xiulan She.

By 0800 GMT, the German baseload day-ahead power had fallen 20% to 96.0 Euros ($112.39) per megawatt hour.

The French equivalent baseload contract for Friday delivery was down 38.4%, at 38.5 Euros/MWh.

LSEG data indicated that the German wind power production was expected to increase from 5.8 gigawatts to 9.3 GW on Friday, while in France it was expected to go up to 11.4 GW.

In both countries, solar power production increased by 3.6 GW during the same time period.

The French nuclear capacity remained at 75%.

The power demand in Germany is expected to drop to 52.2 GW by the weekend, a loss of 500 MW per day, while in France it will reach 43.2 GW with a 300-MW decline.

The German baseload for the year ahead fell 1.7%, to 83.4 Euros/MWh. Baseload for 2026 in France was down by 1.0% to 59.7 Euros/MWh.

Benchmark European carbon permits fell 0.7%, to 71.71 Euros per metric ton.

Analysis of EPEX SPOT data by renewables company 1Komma5 revealed that the number of trading sessions this year where European spot power prices are negative (meaning in scenarios of overproduction, the seller pays to place the delivery volume with the buyer) totaled 457 as of August 26.

The value of the products sold by 1Komma5, a company that sells photovoltaics and home-storage battery systems, as well as heat pumps, electric car chargers and electric car chargers in addition to smart meters, is exactly what the full-year 2020 will be worth.

According to a monthly GfK survey, the German consumer's sentiment is likely to decline for the third consecutive month in September.

(source: Reuters)