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European Energy Markets
1JUN

EDF holds 350-370 TWh guidance on 29.3 TWh

3 min read
08:52UTC

EDF reported April 2026 nuclear output of 29.3 TWh and cumulative January-April output of 133.2 TWh on Saturday 9 May, maintaining full-year guidance of 350-370 TWh unchanged ahead of Flamanville-3 entering its one-year major overhaul in September 2026.

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Key takeaway

EDF's nuclear pace anchors French clearings until Flamanville-3 leaves the fleet in September.

EDF reported April 2026 nuclear output of 29.3 TWh on Saturday 9 May, with cumulative January-April output at 133.2 TWh, up 3.1 TWh on the same period of 2025 1. Full-year 2026 guidance held at 350-370 TWh unchanged. EDF is Électricité de France, the French state-controlled operator of the country's 56-reactor fleet supplying approximately 70% of national electricity.

The April print is the operating context for the France day-ahead variance story. French nuclear baseload suppressed prices to EUR 37.00 on Monday 11 May before thermal-set prices returned on Tuesday at EUR 69.63 . The cumulative pace above 2025 keeps continental power below German clearing on high-renewable sessions through Q2, anchoring the FR-DE spread compression visible in the 12 May print.

Flamanville-3, EDF's 1.6 GW EPR at Normandy, is still entering a one-year major overhaul in September 2026. The buffer that kept France below Germany through most of Q2 narrows materially from Q4. Forward positions leaning on French nuclear surplus through the heating season are pricing the cumulative print rather than the September calendar; the overhaul will amplify both the level and the variance into Q4 just as the storage trajectory implied by current injection pace lands the bloc near 73% on 1 November.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

EDF operates France's 56 nuclear power plants, which generate about 70% of France's electricity. In April 2026, EDF's plants produced 29.3 TWh of electricity, about 3 TWh more than in April 2025. EDF said it expects to produce 350 to 370 TWh for the full year 2026, the same guidance it has maintained. One important caveat: a new nuclear reactor called Flamanville-3, which only started operating in late 2024 after years of delays, is due for a major one-year maintenance shutdown starting in September 2026. This will temporarily reduce French power output and could push electricity prices higher in France and neighbouring countries from autumn onwards.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Flamanville-3's September 2026 overhaul removes approximately 12-15 TWh from EDF's Q4 2026 generation; combined with a storage trajectory pointing to 73% by 1 November, the French nuclear buffer that suppressed continental prices through Q2 narrows precisely when winter demand ramps.

  • Consequence

    The 3.1 TWh year-on-year cumulative advantage through April widens the forward spread between French and German day-ahead clearing on high-renewable days, sustaining the cross-border arbitrage compression visible on 12 May through Q3.

First Reported In

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

EDF· 12 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
EDF holds 350-370 TWh guidance on 29.3 TWh
EDF's cumulative pace holds above 2025, suppressing French day-ahead prices on high-renewable sessions, but the Flamanville-3 overhaul will remove 1.6 GW of baseload at the onset of the heating season.
Different Perspectives
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
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European Commission and DG Energy
European Commission and DG Energy
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Hungarian and Slovak industrial offtakers
Hungarian and Slovak industrial offtakers
Hungary and Slovakia pay a EUR 2-plus delivered-gas premium over TTF benchmark prices regardless of ACER's improved pipeline-congestion reading, and both are litigating the 17 June EU pipeline ban at the CJEU (ID:3229). A post-17 June tightening of TurkStream supply would widen that basis further.
EBN and Dutch state
EBN and Dutch state
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CRE and French gas operators
CRE and French gas operators
France's 100% mandatory CRE booking order is carrying French injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing EU aggregate cover that Germany's abolished levy cannot supply. The order renews annually on CRE decision, making it a political risk rather than a structural guarantee.
FNB Gas and German TSOs
FNB Gas and German TSOs
FNB Gas formally declared the market-based storage-refill framework broken on 27 May, citing zero-clearing January auctions, ten days after Berlin ruled out any summer injection scheme. The intervention sets the institutional predicate for reintroducing a storage levy; the Gasspeicherumlage precedent (2022-25) confirms the administrative path is open.