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European Energy Markets
4JUN

ACER builds enforcement stack in 48 hours

4 min read
10:45UTC

ACER published the 44th REMIT Quarterly, the Electricity Network Tariff Repository and a Southeast Europe price-spike analysis between Wednesday 20 May and Thursday 21 May; the compliance paradox runs to the 12 June consultation close.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Operate-and-document through summer; first formal REMIT 2.0 enforcement is the asymmetric tail risk.

ACER (Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators) released the 44th REMIT Quarterly on Thursday 21 May, the first systematic Q1 review of REMIT 2.0 , and announced a joint ACER/EC workshop on 11 June titled "Advancing REMIT implementation and energy market surveillance" 1. On Wednesday 20 May ACER launched its Electricity Network Tariff Repository, the first EU tool for cross-border power tariff transparency, and the same day published an analysis of the summer 2024 Southeast Europe price spike, estimating that fully enforcing the 70% minimum cross-zonal capacity rule would have delivered EUR 580m of additional consumer welfare.

The compliance paradox stays unresolved. The REMIT 2.0 transaction-reporting guidance consultation closes on 12 June, one day after the workshop, leaving the operative posture for trading intermediaries through summer as operate-and-document. ACER has logged 204 STORs filed in 2025 against zero formal enforcement actions since the 29 April recast , and the first systematic Q1 review now sits in the public record. Hungary and Slovakia, named in ACER's 6 May TurkStream derogation opinions , face their 5 August EC ruling against this enforcement backdrop, with Kiskundorozsma-1 still awaiting Commission response inside the same window.

The European Commission convened the workshop alongside ACER as the formal compliance milestone; non-EU reporting intermediaries lose grandfather coverage from the 29 April recast and feed the surveillance uplift ACER demanded on 8 May. Against the enforcement noise, the Electricity Network Tariff Repository is the working operating-layer change: a cross-border power tariff transparency tool changes the interconnector spread economics from the bottom of the merit order up, and the EUR 580m welfare estimate gives the 70% rule a number to enforce against rather than a discretionary debate. For desks running interconnector spreads, that tool is the genuine operating-layer change; the REMIT enforcement posture stays a tail-risk read until first action lands.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

ACER is the EU's energy markets regulator. This week it published three documents inside two working days: a quarterly review of REMIT, the EU rulebook that monitors wholesale gas and power trading for manipulation; a new tool that lets businesses compare electricity network charges across EU countries for the first time; and an analysis showing that better-enforced electricity grid rules could have saved consumers EUR 580 million in the Southeast Europe price spike of summer 2024. The timing matters because EU trading firms are currently required to comply with new REMIT rules that came into force on 29 April, but ACER is still consulting on the detailed guidance for how those rules work - and that consultation does not close until 12 June.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Germany cannot inject at this price

Norwegian Offshore Directorate (Sodir)· 22 May 2026
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