Back to Blog

Fuels lifted French and German July prices

Eylert Ellefsen
Archived blog post. This blog post has been transferred from our previous blogging platform. Links and images may not work as intended.

European spot prices turned out significantly higher in June than what the market expected by end of May. In this blog post, we’re reviewing the main reasons, focusing on France and Germany.

  • Weekly spot prices rose from about 20 €/MWh to about 30 €/MWh during June:            
Spot Base weekly CWE (DE+FR) Apr-Jun (EUR/MWh)
  • The average spot-prices for June were delivered about 5.0 €/MWh higher than last traded for Germany and France:

These price increases were partially caused by a moderately bullish fundamental situation, but more so from rising fuels/SRMC costs. Take notice that by end of May the weather outlooks and available production capacity for the first part of June were already priced into the traded June contract.

Main fundamentals CWE Weekly (MW) since April

The chart above shows that German wind power production turned out lower than normal in June, while French nuclear production fell gradually over the month. We also saw high temperatures during week 26, which contributed to a moderately bullish fundamental situation.

Fuels: July contracts

Fuel prices rose significantly during June (ref above chart). Furthermore, due to issues with Russian coal supplies, falling French nuclear availability and rising EUA prices (+24%), the July contract rose about 25% during June. Gas prices, on the other hand, moved less:

   

This meant that the SRMC for coal and gasrose by 20%-25%, or at an average of about 5 €/MWh. This difference of about 5€/MWh is quite close to the increased June spot compared to the last traded M+1price on 29 May.

We conclude that the increase in fuel pricesled to an 5 €/MWh increased spot-prices as an average for June.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              

In the following chart, we show the traded July contracts and calculated SRMC's for France and Germany since the start of May:

FUT + SRMC- Germany/France July (€/MWh), Base 40D history

Traded prices are quite close to the coal SRMC as the gas-fired capacity can not cover all the demand for conventional thermal power.                                                                                                                                                                            

Slightly higher French prices at the end of June indicate a fear of a heatwave and low nuclear capacity.                                                                                                

Despite these and other interesting fundamental factors for July, we believe that the direction of fuels and CO2 prices will be the key factors to watch in July.

Edited by: Morten Munkejord

More from the Blog

French nuclear outages winter 2022/23 and power balance outlook

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

French nuclear production is expected to reach its lowest production level since 1991 this year. This is mainly because of extended technical inspections and a large number of outages, but reduced production during the heat waves this summer has also played a part. By the end of August, we see that 25 out of 56 French nuclear plants are out of operation, resulting in a production output of 26 GWh/h – which is about 10 GWh/h lower than for the same month last year. EDF has announced production targets of 280-300 TWh for 2022, and 300-330 TWh for 2023. Based on these targets, EQ has studied the power balance outlook for 2022/23 and the nuclear production estimates for the winter.

Read Story

Hydropower production in the Alp region at 25 year-low after the summer drought

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

The European Continent has experienced an extraordinarily hot and dry summer. As a result, there has been a lot of focus on reduced nuclear capacity due to higher river temperatures and low flow rates. In this blog post, EQ will focus on the hydropower situation across the Alp region – having hit the lowest production levels in 25 years this summer. For reference, the Alp region includes Germany, France, Switzerland, Austria, and Italy with an accumulated yearly production level of 187 TWh.

Read Story

Norway-South: Hydro Reservoir scenarios towards December – will the supply situation be threatened next spring?

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

There is a strong public focus on the very low hydro reservoir situation in Norway-South as spot prices are surging, and we continue to experience an energy crisis across Europe. How can Norway-South avoid any risk of a supply squeeze?

Read Story

Ready to try Energy Quantified?

No payment or credit card required.
Would you rather like a personal demo? Book a demo