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EU gas-fired power output down in Aug

  • Spanish Market: Electricity, Natural gas
  • 04/09/24

EU gas-fired power generation fell on the year in August, even as above-average temperatures bolstered power demand.

EU gas-fired output was 27.7TWh in August, making up 14.4pc of the generation mix, according to data from Fraunhofer ISE. EU gas-fired output was 29.3TWh a year earlier and 36.8TWh in August 2022.

Spain and France drove the overall EU drop. Spanish gas-fired generation fell to 4.1TWh from 5.6TWh, as renewable generation rose on the year. French generation dropped to 626GWh from 1.6TWh as nuclear output increased. Italy partly offset this fall as gas-fired output increased to 9.6TWh from 7.7TWh. Gas-fired generation in Germany edged up to 3.2TWh from 2.9TWh.

In Italy and Spain, usually the two EU countries with the highest summer gas-fired generation supported by strong demand for cooling, average maximum temperatures in Rome and Madrid were almost 3°C above 10-year averages. Maximum temperatures in Athens were also nearly 3°C above 10-year averages.

Above-average temperatures boosted power demand for cooling. Total power demand last month hit 193.6TWh across the EU, up from 190.2TWh in August 2023, but still down from August in every other year since at least 2015, as shown by Fraunhofer data.

Given the above-average temperatures — especially in southern Europe — and the growing use of air conditioning, the drop in power demand from pre-2023 might have been driven by weaker industrial consumption. Energy-intensive industries across Europe have continued to struggle this year with high energy costs and muted demand. German power demand in August was 36.9TWh, the lowest since at least 2010, apart from last year.

And the decrease in gas-fired generation despite higher year-on-year EU power demand came as a result of higher nuclear and renewable output, the latter of which increased to 87.5TWh from 82TWh in August 2023, driven by strong solar output of 31.6TWh, up from 23.8TWh.

Nuclear output rose to 51.6TWh from 46TWh, supported by increased French nuclear generation as nuclear unavailability decreased to 19.3GWh from 27.6GWh a year earlier.

Coal-fired generation was down by almost a quarter in August from a year earlier, falling to 6.9TWh from 9.1TWh. Clean day-ahead spark spreads for 55pc gas-fired units held a premium to equivalent dark spreads for 40pc-efficient units on most days in August in Germany, France and Italy. This suggests there was an incentive for firms to boost gas-fired generation over coal-fired generation, at times of low renewable output.


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LNG imports feasible, New Zealand utilities say


10/07/25
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LNG imports feasible, New Zealand utilities say

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Trump threatens 50pc Brazil tariff: Update


09/07/25
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Trump threatens 50pc Brazil tariff: Update

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Trump threatens 50pc Brazil tariff


09/07/25
09/07/25

Trump threatens 50pc Brazil tariff

Washington, 9 July (Argus) — US president Donald Trump is threatening to impose a 50pc tariff on imports from Brazil from 1 August, citing the ongoing trial of that country's former president, Jair Bolsonaro. Trump's letter to Brazil's president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, released on Wednesday, is one of the 22 that the US leader sent to his foreign counterparts since 7 July, announcing new tariff rates that the US will be charging on imports from those countries. But his letter to Brazil stands out for allegations of a "witch hunt" against Bolsonaro, who — much like Trump — disputed his electoral defeat and attempted to stay in office. Brazil's supreme court qualified Bolsonaro's actions in 2022 as an attempted coup, ordering him to stand trial. Trump said he will impose the 50pc tariff because "in part to Brazil's insidious attacks on Free Elections and the Fundamental Free Speech Rights of Americans". The latter is a reference to orders by judges in Brazil to suspend social media accounts for spreading "misinformation". Trump separately said he would direct US trade authorities to launch an investigation of Brazil's treatment of US social media platforms — an action likely to result in additional tariffs. Trump's letter to Lula also contains language similar to that included in letters sent to 21 other foreign leaders, accusing Brazil of unfair trade practices and suggesting that the only way to avoid payments of tariffs is if Brazilian companies "decide to build or manufacture product within the US". The Trump administration since 5 April has been charging a 10pc extra "Liberation Day" tariff on most imports — energy commodities and critical minerals are exceptions — from Brazil and nearly every foreign trade partner. Trump on 9 April imposed even higher tariffs on key trading partners, only to delay them the same day until 9 July. On 7 July, Trump signed an executive order further delaying the implementation of higher rates until 12:01am ET (04:01 GMT) on 1 August. Brasilia did not immediately react to Trump's threat of higher tariffs. Trump earlier this week threatened to impose 10pc tariffs on any country cooperating with the Brics group, which includes Brazil, China, Russia, India and South Africa. Lula hosted a Brics summit in Rio de Janeiro on 6-7 July. By Haik Gugarats Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Market eyes grid balance as Europe tests granular GOOs


09/07/25
09/07/25

Market eyes grid balance as Europe tests granular GOOs

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