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European Energy Markets
22MAY

REMIT 2.0 T+10 deadline lands today

3 min read
10:26UTC

REMIT 2.0 non-standard contract reports under the T+10 window fell due for the first time on Tuesday 12 May 2026, the first live compliance milestone under the recast framework, while ACER's public consultation guidance remains open to revision until 12 June 2026.

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Key takeaway

First REMIT 2.0 reports filed today against guidance still open to formal revision until 12 June.

REMIT 2.0 non-standard contract reports under the T+10 reporting window fell due for the first time on Tuesday 12 May 2026 1. REMIT is the EU Regulation on Wholesale Energy Market Integrity and Transparency; the recast framework entered force on 29 April with the first 14-day reporting deadline landing on 12 May. ACER, the EU Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators, administers the framework and published the open letter setting the 12 May deadline.

The compliance paradox flagged since update #3 materialises with this deadline. Firms must comply from 29 April against consultation guidance running to 12 June that has not yet been finalised. Market participants are filing first-cycle T+10 reports while the implementing guidance against which those reports are judged remains open to formal revision. The mechanism is structural to the recast text: there is no grandfather clause, no simultaneity waiver, and no grace period in the regulation as adopted.

ACER's regulatory pressure points converge in the same week. The 6 May TurkStream-entry derogation opinions on seven national regulatory authorities and the 12 May REMIT milestone are the two ACER-driven decision points facing market participants this week. Reporting intermediaries currently serving European energy markets file under guidance they may have to amend by August; the explicit management problem is sequencing the systems build against a moving target rather than the rule content itself.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

REMIT is an EU law that requires companies trading wholesale electricity and gas to report their contracts to a regulator called ACER. The goal is to detect market manipulation and insider trading in energy markets, similar to the rules governing financial markets. A new, updated version of REMIT entered force on 29 April 2026. Under the new rules, companies must now file reports within 10 business days of making a contract (down from one month previously). The first deadline under this new system fell on 12 May 2026. The problem is that ACER is still consulting on the detailed guidance for how reports should be filed. That consultation runs until 12 June, two weeks after the first deadline. On 12 May 2026, companies filed first-cycle reports against a specification that ACER can still revise until 12 June.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If ACER's June 2026 final guidance materially changes the T+10 report format, companies that filed on 12 May face retroactive correction exercises and potential systems rework costs similar to the MiFID II correction cycle of 2018.

  • Precedent

    The REMIT 2.0 simultaneity paradox (compliance mandatory before guidance is final) sets a precedent for EU energy regulation that smaller, non-EU reporting intermediaries without large compliance teams are least able to absorb.

First Reported In

Update #9 · Storage 35% met, 80% trajectory still missed

ACER· 12 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
OIES energy analysts
OIES energy analysts
Bruegel's EUR 26-44bn model was calibrated for 80% delivered; the 0.17 pp/day pace projects 55-65%, so the range now prices the wrong scenario. Absence of a revision at EUR 47-50 TTF is itself a signal: the EUR 35bn mid-range is becoming the operative sub-80% consensus.
German Economy Ministry / Bundesnetzagentur
German Economy Ministry / Bundesnetzagentur
The cabinet-approved gas plant auction law sets a first 9 GW tender for 8 September 2026 but does not address the 2026 injection gap. The Bundesnetzagentur's early-warning stage is active but operationally inert at 37% fill; Berlin has no statutory instrument to compel commercial injection.
EDF / CRE (French regulatory position)
EDF / CRE (French regulatory position)
France's 100% mandatory CRE-regulated storage booking is providing the EU-aggregate injection cover that Germany's abolished levy no longer can. EDF's 350-370 TWh full-year nuclear guidance anchors FR-DE spread economics through August; the September Flamanville-3 overhaul removes 1.6 GW at heating-season start, reversing the surplus that has suppressed Continental clearing all year.
QatarEnergy / Golden Pass commercial position
QatarEnergy / Golden Pass commercial position
The second Golden Pass cargo to Adriatic LNG demonstrates QatarEnergy retaining a commercial European supply position during the Ras Laffan force majeure through its 70% equity stake in the Texas joint venture. The ACER 58% US-share headline carries a Qatari component inside it; the provenance re-labelling is a structural feature of the post-Hormuz supply architecture, not a transitional anomaly.
Japanese and Korean utility buyers (JKM netback discipline)
Japanese and Korean utility buyers (JKM netback discipline)
JKM-TTF spread at USD 2.30 in the week to 7 May leaves Asian buyers with limited price advantage over European bids on spot Atlantic cargoes. At EUR 47-50 TTF, Atlantic LNG routing to Europe is commercially marginal; Korean and Japanese procurement desks see no incentive to release swing cargoes to Europe at JKM parity.
ACER / Teresa Ribera (European Commission)
ACER / Teresa Ribera (European Commission)
ACER's 58% US LNG share, cited by EVP Ribera, risks replacing one energy dependency with another after EUR 117 billion in US LNG since 2022. The 11 June workshop is the formal venue on both the REMIT compliance paradox and Germany's missing fill instrument.