Germany day-ahead power cleared an average EUR 126/MWh on 14 July, EUR 132 on 15 July and EUR 156 on 16 July, climbing on cooling demand as the heat dome held 1. Day-ahead is the price for next-day delivery; the clean spark spread is what a gas-fired CCGT earns after paying for its gas and its carbon. Run these clears through the standard 49.13% efficiency and 0.365 tCO2/MWh convention, against TTF near EUR 55 and EUA carbon near EUR 80, and the spread swings from roughly negative on 14 July to positive by 16 July.
German combined-cycle plants clear because the heat needs the megawatts, and the margin turning positive is a by-product of power outrunning its inputs rather than any softening in gas. That distinction is the whole trade: a spark spread that widens on power strength behaves differently from one that widens on cheap fuel, because it collapses the moment the heat breaks.
This eases rather than reverses the squeeze the desk logged on 9 July, when gas and power rose together and compressed the same spread . Then the pressure came from the fuel side; now it comes from demand. The CCGT stack is back in the money, but on a footing that a cooler week would knock straight out again.
