Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Energy Markets
26MAY

Power prices split EUR 131 north-south

3 min read
12:01UTC

Italy cleared at EUR 133/MWh while Spain paid EUR 29/MWh on the same day, the starkest intra-EU power price divergence of 2026.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Gas sets the power price 90% of the time in Italy and 15% in Spain, producing a EUR 100+ spread.

Italy cleared at EUR 133/MWh in day-ahead power on 13 April 2026, while Spain settled at EUR 29/MWh on the same exchange day. The Netherlands matched Italy at EUR 128/MWh, Belgium at EUR 128/MWh. France surged 188% day-on-day. Then south and north: Spain at EUR 29/MWh, Portugal at EUR 28/MWh, Norway (northern zones) at EUR 2/MWh. A single market, five time zones apart in price.

Merit order mechanics explain the gap. In gas-dependent markets, gas-fired plants set the marginal clearing price. Ember data shows gas sets the electricity price most hours in Italy but a fraction of that in Spain, where wind and solar capacity has displaced gas from the stack. The result: a EUR 100+/MWh spread between Iberian and north-western European power markets.

For industrial consumers, the spread is a location arbitrage signal. Energy-intensive production in Spain operates at roughly one quarter of the power cost of an equivalent plant in Italy or the Netherlands. For policymakers, it is a live demonstration that renewables penetration translates directly into price shock insulation, not in theory or over a decade, but on a single trading day.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Electricity prices in Europe vary by country because each national grid has a different energy mix. Countries that generate most of their power from wind, solar, and hydropower pay less when gas prices are high, because gas is not the primary source setting their prices. On 13 April, the gap between Italy (EUR 133/MWh) and Spain (EUR 29/MWh) showed this vividly. Italy relies heavily on gas-fired power stations, so when gas is expensive, Italian electricity is expensive too. Spain has invested heavily in wind and solar, so gas prices matter much less to Spanish electricity costs.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Italy-Spain divergence reflects two decades of unequal investment in power system gas dependency. Italy built approximately 40 GW of gas-fired combined-cycle capacity between 1995 and 2010, primarily because gas was cheap and nuclear was politically blocked after the 1987 referendum. Spain, facing similar nuclear constraints, pivoted to wind and solar from 2005 onwards, accelerated by EU renewable energy directives.

The result is that Italian power dispatch depends on gas as the marginal clearing technology for approximately 90% of hours, while Spanish dispatch has largely moved gas to the peaking residual. This was a strategically advantageous position in 2015-20 when TTF was EUR 15-20/MWh; it is now a structural liability at EUR 47/MWh.

Escalation

The 188% France day-on-day surge is the most acute indicator: France, normally insulated by nuclear baseload, apparently lost significant nuclear generation on 13 April (likely a combination of planned outages and load constraints), exposing its residual gas dependency. If French nuclear availability remains below seasonal norms through April, French prices will continue to trade closer to the Dutch-Belgian range than the Spanish.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Energy-intensive industrial production is shifting toward Iberia at an accelerating rate, creating a structural permanent loss of manufacturing activity in Germany, Italy, and Belgium that will not reverse even if gas prices normalise.

  • Opportunity

    The Pyrenean interconnector expansion, currently in ENTSO-E planning phases, has gained urgent political support from both French and Spanish governments as the EUR 100+ price gap makes the economic case undeniable.

First Reported In

Update #1 · Europe's thinnest gas cushion since 2018

Ember· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Cefic and European industrial gas offtakers
Cefic and European industrial gas offtakers
Chemical manufacturers running at 62-68% utilisation face mandate-funded storage that secures volume at above-commercial prices without reducing gas costs. A EUR 35bn refill bill, if confirmed, flows back through regulated network tariffs, adding directly to industrial energy costs already named by BASF and INEOS as structural.
OIES and energy research institutions
OIES and energy research institutions
Bruegel and OIES have not published a revised refill cost model at EUR 47-51 TTF with sub-0.4 pp/day pace. The EUR 35bn mid-range is drifting into use as the operative sub-80% November consensus, and the 11 June ACER workshop is the next venue where EU-level storage instrument advocacy can surface.
Equinor upstream gas
Equinor upstream gas
The Troll A compressor fault removed 34.6 mcm/day, stacked on Hammerfest, yet TTF fell 8.1% on Iran news the same day. Norwegian supply disruptions carry no price premium while Hormuz dominates; Equinor's 31 May Troll restart is a first estimate and the 2025 Hammerfest compressor fault of the same class slipped 24 days.
German Economy Ministry and Bundesnetzagentur
German Economy Ministry and Bundesnetzagentur
Berlin confirmed on 20 May it will not introduce a summer injection-incentive scheme, leaving Germany as the EU's only major unincentivised market after the storage levy lapsed on 1 January 2026. Commercial injectors apparently used the 18 May EUR 50 spike to lock winter supply cost rather than book against a structurally negative strip.
CRE and French gas operators
CRE and French gas operators
CRE's 100% mandatory booking order funds French injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing the EU aggregate cover that masks Germany's gap. The French position is insulated from TTF price moves but exposed to CRE's annual renewal cycle, a political risk rather than a commercial one.
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
TTF's 8.1% crash on a deal headline despite 50-plus mcm/day of verified Norwegian outages settled the EUR 50 question: it is a diplomatic ceiling, not a floor, and the short EUR 50-strike summer position keeps paying until Iran resolves. EBN's price-insensitive mandate buying tightens the prompt but the EUR 233m budget cap is a known position risk.