EDF's French nuclear fleet posted its highest monthly output since 2019 in March 2026 and is on track for 350-370 TWh full-year against a CRE-estimated average sale price of EUR 65.90/MWh under the new VNU mechanism 1. The fleet's output translated directly into wholesale prices on 15 April : France landed well beneath the German print and close to Spanish levels on the same session.
The operational effect is that French nuclear surplus is behaving like a southern-European supply asset rather than a domestic baseload. On a low-wind Iberian print the Franco-Iberian interconnector is the arbitrage; on a gas-set German print the north-south flow absorbs the German power premium. Both directions depend on the fleet holding availability through the heavy-maintenance window that typically begins in autumn.
Flamanville-3, France's newest reactor at roughly 1.6 GW, enters a one-year major overhaul from September 2026. That is one unit off the fleet through winter and into the next spring. The shortfall is material relative to the roughly 350-370 TWh target, and it is timed against the autumn-winter window when European storage is either high or exposed. If Germany's April injection fails to recover , the Flamanville-3 overhaul compounds a thin supply stack in the quarter when the stack matters most.
For utilities and industrial offtakers the picture through Q2 is a Franco-Iberian arbitrage while the fleet runs, followed by a material reduction in the regional buffer from September. Positions that lean on French surplus persisting through Q4 2026 need to price the Flamanville-3 calendar, not the March headline.
