Back to Blog

German coal closures raise peak prices by nearly 10 €/MWh week 1, lifting Nordic 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.

As of 1 January, 4.8 GW coal capacity was shut down in German as part of the country’s push to gradually exit from coal-powered production. We have analysed the recent price impact of the coal exit and simulated what peak prices would have been if the plants were still inoperation.

Amongst the 4.8 GW of coal-fired production capacity that was closed down by the end of 2020 were several rather modern plants which often ran at max capacity during peak-hours in Q1 and Q4 last year. We reviewed the potential impact of the German coal-exit in a blog post on 8 December.

Key findings

  • By the first week of 2021 we are seeing that very strong spot prices due to low wind and strong consumption across Europe. Peak-prices reached 110 €/MW, which is about 200% of a normalized level.
  • Given the market situation during week 1 we estimate that the coal plants that were shut down in December would have had an output of about 4,000 MW during peak hours if they were still in operation.
  • In turn, we estimate that the prices would have been 15-20 €/MWh lower on some days if the plants were still running. Conversely, we estimate that the coal plant closures increased German peak-price by 8-10 €/MWh on average during week 1.
  • The impact on Nordic peak-prices would have been similar: 8-10 €/MWh lower during peak hours and 3-4 €/MWh for the weekly Baseload price.

Coal exit plants

Now, let’s see how we got to where we are by giving you an overview of the shut-down of coal plants which produced about 4.9 TWh last year, representing about 16% of total hard coal volume (30.1 TWh). Their capacity represented nearly 25% of coal-fired plants above 100 MW, so the coal-exit plants were important for peak-load production and prices.

German coal-fired plants shut down on 1 January 2021.

Before digging deeper into the most recent changes, let’s look at the weekly peak load production of coal-fired plants in 2020, plus the first two weeks of this year.

Weekly German coal-fired peak production. Divided by now-shutdown plants and plants still running.

We see that during week 4 nearly all the coal-exit plants produced at max. capacity (4000 MW), during Q4 we see several weeks at about 3,000 MW. From this, we estimate that 4,000 MW is the maximum weekly average peak output level.

Week 1 prices

German spot prices rose during week 1 as French consumption remained high while wind power output in France and Germany fell during the week. Notice also that Wednesday was a partial holiday in Germany and several countries, thus the consumption was somewhat subdued.

We are looking at how peak-prices rose from Tuesday-Wednesday until Thursday-Friday, and then try to assess the impact German plant closures (weekly average of 4,000 MW).

Workday spot prices for week 1 2021.

The daily workday peak-hour values for the most relevant German fundamentals and prices are shown in the table below. We see how the wind power output declines towards Thursday/Friday and prices are subsequently spiking.

Notice that the French power balance was very stable these days, with high consumption and low wind. French and German prices were not perfectly coupled on Thursday/Friday, but we assume that the French market forced the German market higher than if temperatures were closer to normal.

Daily peak fundamentals and spot prices for Germany. To the right, Nord Pool spot prices.

The average peak-price for Thursday/Friday came out 33.08 €/MWh higher than for Tuesday/Wednesday given an increase in the residual load of 8.4 GW.

Coal-fired production during these days amounted to 12.0 GW, but we assume that the closed coal plants would otherwise have produced at about 4.0 GW in a market situation like this. In turn, had these plants been online, the increase in peak price would have been about 50% lower, or around 16-17 €/MWh.

For Monday-Wednesday period, when the residual load was more moderate, we estimate a peak price sensitivity of 3-4 €/4 GW.

As an average for week 1, we furthermore estimate the German peak-price to be increased by 8-10 €/MWh due to the coal-exit.

The Nordic peak-prices were strongly correlated to the Continental prices these days, thus we assume the same sensitivity of 8-10 €/MWh for this region.

Conclusions

The German coal closures in December have had an obvious bullish impact on German peak prices in the New Year.  With more closures in the years to come, peak hours will be more expensive, and the power balance is likely to be strained during the winter months.

EQ is closely observing these developments and will adapt our spot price modelling to similar scenarios like the ones we have observed so far this year.

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