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European Energy Markets
15APR

Spain power jumps 148% in two days on low wind

3 min read
13:33UTC

Spanish day-ahead cleared at EUR 71.91/MWh, up from EUR 29 on 13 April, as a generation-side shortfall pushed gas peakers into the stack.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iberian insulation is real over a year and fragile over a day.

Spain cleared at EUR 71.91/MWh in day-ahead power on 15 April, up 148% from EUR 29/MWh on 13 April and compressing the Italy-Spain spread from EUR 104 on Monday to EUR 70 on Wednesday, a 33% narrowing in two sessions 1. Italy cleared at EUR 141.90/MWh, France at EUR 72.41, Germany at EUR 117.53; the ENTSO-E feed shows the Italy-Germany gap widening while the Franco-Iberian pair moved to near-parity.

The prior briefing had positioned the Italy-Spain gap as the canonical case of merit-order divergence, with gas setting Italy's price the majority of hours and wind plus solar setting Spain's . A 148% one-way move over two sessions is the mechanism in reverse: a low-wind day compounded by hydro de-rating pushed Spanish gas-fired peakers up the merit order, clearing into a gas-set stack. Iberian insulation is a probability-weighted advantage across a year, not a constant across a day.

France printing EUR 45 beneath Germany on the same day points to the setup through Q2: French nuclear surplus behaves like a southern-European asset, and the Franco-Iberian interconnector becomes the arbitrage of the week on any repeat low-wind print.

The implication for industrial relocation arguments that lean on Iberian power-cost structure is that those arguments survive only if the user can tolerate the dispersion around the mean. On a low-wind day Spain prices into the gas stack; on a high-wind day it prices off the renewables stack. The day-ahead print, not the monthly average, is what settles P&L.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Spain's electricity system runs mainly on wind and solar power, which in a normal week means Spanish electricity is among the cheapest in Europe. On 15 April, the wind effectively stopped. In the European electricity market, the price is set by the most expensive generator needed to meet demand at any given hour. When wind generation drops, Spain needs to fire up gas power stations instead, and those stations charge what the gas costs them to run. At current gas prices, that is roughly EUR 70/MWh. Two days earlier, Spain was running almost entirely on renewables and paying EUR 29/MWh. The 148% jump is entirely the result of weather, not any policy or supply disruption. It will reverse once wind picks up.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Spain's power price architecture creates an inherent volatility asymmetry. On high-renewables days, Spain is largely insulated from gas prices (gas sets the clearing price only 15% of hours per year per Ember/ID:2361). On low-renewables days, the transition to gas-clearing is total and abrupt because no intermediate generation stack exists between renewables and peakers.

The Iberian peninsula's limited interconnection with France (approximately 2.8 GW southbound capacity) means French nuclear surplus cannot fully absorb demand during merit-order switches, so gas peakers are forced into merit rather than imports covering the gap.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The Italy-Spain spread compression from EUR 104 to EUR 70 on 15 April demonstrates that weather volatility can narrow the insulation benefit Spain's renewable buildout provides, temporarily making Spain's price profile resemble gas-heavy markets.

First Reported In

Update #2 · TTF EUR 42 as Russian LNG ban enters range

euenergy.live (ENTSO-E feed)· 15 Apr 2026
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Different Perspectives
European Commission
European Commission
Commissioner Jorgensen formally acknowledged the post-Russia energy security framework cannot absorb the LNG shock, cutting the mandatory storage target from 90% to 80% and explicitly warning that normalisation is not foreseeable even with immediate peace. The Commission is now dependent on coordinated member state LNG purchasing and demand flexibility to bridge the remaining gap.
Germany
Germany
Germany holds the EU's largest storage estate but entered injection season at 23.32% fill with a 4.3 TWh/day injection ceiling that physically prevents any sprint recovery; the Bundeswirtschaftsministerium has maintained its early warning stage since July 2025. An escalation to Alarmstufe, which would trigger compulsory injection obligations, remains live if storage fails to rise through April.
QatarEnergy
QatarEnergy
QatarEnergy declared force majeure on European LNG contracts citing Ras Laffan strike damage, while the Gulf Research Centre assessed the declaration may also reflect a commercial decision to reallocate volumes toward higher-priced Asian spot markets without triggering breach penalties. Independent engineering confirmation of damage extent has not been published, leaving legal and commercial uncertainty unresolved.
Equinor / Norway
Equinor / Norway
Norway remains the EU's largest pipeline gas supplier and benefits from sustained elevated TTF; Norwegian pipeline capacity has partially offset the Russian supply loss but cannot close the structural gap. Norway Zone 4 power prices at EUR 2/MWh on 13 April illustrate how hydro-dominated systems are structurally decoupled from the gas price shock affecting continental Europe.
Italy
Italy
Italy cleared day-ahead power at EUR 133/MWh on 13 April, four to five times the Iberian equivalent, because gas-fired plants set the marginal price for approximately 90% of generation hours. Italy's circa 40 GW of gas-fired CCGT capacity, built when gas was cheap and nuclear was politically blocked, is now a structural liability at EUR 47/MWh TTF.
Spain
Spain
Spain cleared at EUR 29/MWh on the same day Italy paid EUR 133/MWh, the starkest single-day demonstration that its renewable energy investment is translating directly into price shock insulation for industry. Iberian interconnector constraints at the Pyrenees mean Spain cannot export this advantage to northern European markets at scale.