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European Energy Markets
1JUN

German power climbs to EUR 156, spark flips

2 min read
08:52UTC

German day-ahead power cleared EUR 156/MWh on 16 July, up from EUR 126 two days earlier, as cooling demand under the heat dome dragged the clean spark spread from negative into positive.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

A demand-driven spark spread turned Germany's CCGTs profitable, a margin a cooler week would knock out.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Gas-fired power stations in Germany make money on the gap between what they pay for gas and carbon permits and what they earn selling electricity. That gap, called the clean spark spread, had been slim or negative for weeks. This week electricity prices jumped because of the heat wave (people running air conditioning), while gas and carbon costs did not rise as much, so gas power plants suddenly became profitable to run again. It is less about gas getting cheaper and more about electricity getting more expensive faster than its ingredients did.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Germany's clean spark spread flips sign whenever day-ahead power climbs faster than its two input costs, gas (TTF) and carbon (EUA), move together. This window that happened because cooling demand pulled German day-ahead from EUR 126 to EUR 156/MWh across three sessions while TTF firmed only modestly and EUA actually eased back under EUR 81 (see the carbon event in this briefing), leaving the power side of the equation to do almost all the work.

The structural precondition is thin renewable output: when wind generation is low during a heat dome, as it has been through this window, German CCGT plant sets the marginal clearing price directly, so any demand spike shows up in the power price with little dilution from cheaper generation displacing it.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    A positive clean spark spread gives German CCGT operators an incentive to run harder into the remaining heat window, which in turn supports gas demand even as storage injection slows elsewhere.

First Reported In

Update #27 · TTF hits EUR 55; the arb won't confirm it

Trading Economics· 16 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
German power climbs to EUR 156, spark flips
The spark margin turned positive because power outran its own fuel and carbon costs, not because gas got cheaper.
Different Perspectives
LNG spreads desk
LNG spreads desk
The JKM-TTF arb flipped to a TTF premium of roughly USD 0.6/MMBtu on 15 July, the first time this cycle Europe has outbid Asia, yet no Atlantic cargo has rerouted west. Until a cargo actually moves, the desk reads the Hormuz premium as unconfirmed and the EUR 55 print as vulnerable to a fast reversal.
United States
United States
Washington reimposed a blockade on Iranian ports and a 20% Strait of Hormuz cargo toll on 13 July, driving TTF's 9% two-session rally to EUR 54.995/MWh. The posture is again setting Europe's gas benchmark by sentiment rather than by any confirmed change in cargo flows.
EDF
EDF
EDF slipped the Bugey 3, Golfech 2 and Chooz 2 restarts to 19, 22 and 25 July, pushing all three past the 20 July Bugey heat exemption, after river-cooling limits on the Rhone, Garonne and Meuse forced the cuts. The same thermal ceiling has capped the fleet in every major heatwave since 2003, and this cycle is no exception.
German power desk
German power desk
German day-ahead power climbed from EUR 126 to EUR 156/MWh over 14-16 July as the heat dome held, flipping the clean spark spread positive for the first time since 14 July. Gas-for-power demand is now back in competition with mandate storage injection right as the injection margin itself is thinning.
EU carbon and storage regulators
EU carbon and storage regulators
EUA carbon broke EUR 81/tonne on 13 July as the ETS Market Stability Reserve's scheduled withdrawals met fresh fuel-switching demand from France's nuclear curtailment. Brussels' mandatory storage-fill rule kept German and French injection running regardless of the TTF swings, the mechanism working as designed four years after the 2022 shock.
Equinor
Equinor
Equinor returned its Asgard field from maintenance on 11 July, lifting Gassco's exit nominations to 319.8 mcm/day just as TTF round-tripped on Hormuz risk. The restart gave Norway spare pipeline capacity to help Europe absorb the gas rally without drawing down storage, reinforcing its role as the post-2022 swing supplier.