ACER, the EU agency that coordinates national energy regulators, will widen cross-border marginal-price limits from plus or minus EUR 15,000 to plus or minus EUR 99,999/MWh after July, removing the transitional cap on cross-zonal clearing extremes 1. The cap sets how high a price can clear when capacity is allocated across borders; lifting it lets scarcity register at its true level rather than being truncated.
The timing matters against a market already tracking a wider winter balance. A higher ceiling does nothing on a normal day, but in a genuine scarcity event it lets cross-border prices spike to levels the old cap suppressed, sharpening the tail risk on any winter position.
A second strand runs in parallel. ACER's REMIT transaction-reporting Annex consultation opens on 16 July, covering energy derivatives . REMIT is the EU's wholesale market-integrity regulation, and the agency gained direct cross-border investigatory powers under its 2024 revision; those powers are due to activate in the fourth quarter of 2026.
No ACER cross-border enforcement case exists yet, so the Danish regulator's capacity-hoarding fine functions as the national curtain-raiser, a REMIT-style action that signals the enforcement posture ahead of ACER taking the cross-border lead 2. Desks should treat the fine as the template for how the agency's own first case is likely to look.
