shortage.life · last_sync · 2026-07-08 16:49:52 UTCbuild 27d88d1 · node v22.22.2

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shortage.life
v0.3 · brussels · build f3a2c81
● online · 47/47 sources · 312ms

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$ shortage briefing get eu-electricity-price-split-may-2026
> lang=en read=5min kind=data
> published 2026-05-24

// readout · live

BRENT     $78.99/b 
TTF       €49.05/MWh 
OPEC_ORB  n/a
SPR_US    325.7 Mb 
FAO_FFPI  130.3 
auto-refresh 60slatency 312msbuild 0.3.0commit f3a2c81UTC 00:00:00
$_TICKER
BRENT$80.43▲1.27%TTF€49.05● 0.0%HH$3.27● 0.0%SPR_US325.6 Mb16.7dEU_GAS48.8%18c avgFAO_FFPI130.3▼0.4%WHT$6.11/bu▼0.69%BRENT$80.43▲1.27%TTF€49.05● 0.0%HH$3.27● 0.0%SPR_US325.6 Mb16.7dEU_GAS48.8%18c avgFAO_FFPI130.3▼0.4%WHT$6.11/bu▼0.69%
READ MODE// long-form zoneEDITORIAL · briefingdata·2026-05-24
~/briefings/eu-electricity-price-split-may-2026·data · 5 min read← all briefings
data · Energy · 2026-05-24

EU day-ahead split widens: Belgium at €137/MWh vs France at €60/MWh

A €77/MWh gap between the two highest-correlation grids in Western Europe. We unpack the four drivers.

By K. Lindqvist·2026-05-24·5 min read·energy · power · europe · data

The hourly snapshot

Energy-Charts (Fraunhofer ISE) day-ahead clearing prices, latest hourly observation:

| Zone | EUR/MWh | Δ24h | |---|---|---| | Belgium | 137.05 | +7.8% | | Austria | 129.55 | -9.2% | | Poland | 128.35 | -7.9% | | Germany/Lux | 127.35 | -7.0% | | Netherlands | 127.35 | -2.0% | | France | 60.00 | -8.5% | | Spain | 60.00 | -8.5% |

The Belgium–France spread is €77/MWh, a 128% premium. These are physically interconnected grids with roughly 3 GW of capacity between them.

What drives the split

1. Generation mix. France runs 56 GW of nuclear baseload, currently at ~80% availability. Spain has 28 GW of renewables clearing during sunny mid-day hours. Belgium retired Doel-3 and Tihange-2; its remaining nuclear (Tihange-1, Doel-4) provides about 3 GW, the rest is gas-fired.

2. Gas exposure. Belgium's marginal MWh is set by combined-cycle gas turbines burning TTF gas at €48.68/MWh. At the current heat rate, that's a ~€105/MWh fuel cost before CO₂, before margin. The cleared price is consistent with merit-order economics.

3. Interconnection constraints. Nominal NTC between France and Belgium is 3,000 MW. Effective availability today is lower due to scheduled outages on the Avelin–Avelgem corridor. Congestion rent accrues — to ENTSO-E members, not to consumers.

4. Demand profile. Belgium's industrial demand (chemicals, steel) is less elastic than France's residential-weighted profile. Industrial consumers can't readily defer load.

Implications

For the energy-intensive industries clustered around Antwerp, a €77/MWh persistent gap is the difference between continuing operations and curtailment. The political response — wholesale market reform, capacity remuneration mechanisms — is moving in Brussels but the time horizon is years, not weeks.

Source: Energy-Charts.info (Fraunhofer ISE) public API.