EU Power Set for Biggest Gain in 10 Months on Sanctions

By Marek Strzelecki, Jesper Starn and Julia Mengewein  Jul 31, 2014 8:37 AM PT 

European power prices for next year are headed for the biggest monthly gains since September amid concern sanctions against Russia will boost the cost of coal and gas, raising production costs at utilities.

The German 2015 contract, Europe’s benchmark, climbed 2.8 percent in July, broker data compiled by Bloomberg show. Respective advances for equivalent French and Nordic prices of 1.4 percent and 5.2 percent are also the largest in 10 months.

European Union governments agreed July 29 on their most sweeping sanctions against Russia to date in another attempt to curb President Vladimir Putin’s intervention in Ukraine, raising concern the bloc may be more vulnerable to cuts in its supplies of natural gas and coal. Russian gas accounted for 46 percent of the fuel the EU brought to its market in 2013 and 31 percent of coal it bought externally came from Russia, data from the bloc’s statistics agency show.

“Traders bought in expectation of drastic sanctions against Russia and the potential impact on supply of gas and coal to Europe,” Nicolai Wuesten, a power market analyst at Energieunion GmbH, said yesterday by phone from Schwerin, Germany. “The market is nervous, because we are depending on Russian commodities.”

Electricity Price

German power for 2015 reached 36.15 euros ($48.82) a megawatt-hour, the highest level in more than four months, on July 29 and traded at 35.40 euros at 5:02 p.m. Berlin time today, according to broker data. Coal for delivery to northwest Europe next year closed July 28 at a seven-week high of $80.50 a metric ton and was at $78.30 today, broker data showed. Front-month U.K. natural gas gained for the two weeks through July 25 on ICE Futures Europe and traded today at 41.27 pence a therm ($6.96 a million British thermal units). The sanctions excluded Russia’s gas and coal industries.

“When sanctions were decided, the contract started falling again,” Wuesten said. “Traders were buying the rumor and selling the fact. The Cal 15 has room to drop to 33.50 euros a megawatt-hour by the end of this year if we see a mild winter,” he said, referring to the German contract for next year.

Sluggish development of industries that consume the most energy and growth of renewable generation will hurt German power demand, while coal prices are unlikely to rise for now, Barbara Lambrecht, a Frankfurt-based analyst at Commerzbank AG, said in a report e-mailed yesterday.

Annual Average

“The current price recovery is quickly likely to run out of steam,” Lambrecht said.

The German 2015 contract will average 36 euros this year on the European Energy Exchange AG, according to the bank’s forecast.

Polish electricity for delivery in 2015 climbed 0.7 percent in July and is poised for a record streak of eight monthly gains. Prices were aided by a capacity premium that utilities get from the transmission operator for making plants available for reserve capacity at peak times. The contract traded today at 174.25 zloty ($56.03) a megawatt-hour, up 11 percent since the start of 2014, when the measure was introduced.

“With local coal prices falling and renewable output rising, the reserve capacity mechanism seems key,” Witold Pawlowski, general director of CEZ Trade Polska, a Warsaw-based unit of the largest Czech electricity producer, said yesterday by phone. “It generates oversupply on the balancing market, while curbing spot supplies and pushing forwards higher.”

Next-Day Auctions

German day-ahead power gained 1.3 percent to 32.59 euros a megawatt-hour in today’s auction on the EPEX exchange, while Nordic electricity was little changed at 31.03 euros on Nord Pool Spot AS in Oslo. U.K. power rose for a second day in three on N2EX, climbing 0.8 percent to 37.16 pounds ($62.71).

German average temperatures next week are forecast at 20 degrees Celsius (68 degrees Fahrenheit), 1.4 degrees above the seasonal norm, according to WSI data using the GFS model. The average for northwest Europe and the U.K. will exceed the seasonal norm of 18.5 degrees by 1.2 degrees, it showed.

Temperatures in the Nordic region will average 21.8 degrees Celsius, 5.3 degrees above the seasonal norm, according to the model.

French nuclear availability rose to 85 percent of available capacity today from 84 percent yesterday, data compiled by Bloomberg show. In Germany, Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG delayed the restart of its 1,485-megawatt Philippsburg-2 nuclear reactor by 15 days to Aug. 21 and EON SE had an unplanned halt at its 875-megawatt Heyden coal-fired plant.