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European Oil Markets
8JUN

Spain logs 397 negative-price hours in Q1

3 min read
10:46UTC

Spain recorded 397 hours of negative day-ahead power prices in Q1 2026, eight times the 48 hours of Q1 2025, with the clean-spark squeeze now spreading north into the Continental midday stack.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Spain's 397 negative-price hours confirm Iberian solar penetration is structural, now spreading north into the Continental midday stack.

Euronews reported that Spain logged 397 hours of negative day-ahead power prices in Q1 2026, eight times the 48 hours of Q1 2025 1. The 8x jump is not a heatwave artefact: it is a first-quarter reading from a window with no exceptional heat, the structural maturation of Spanish solar into a grid where baseload and midday demand have not adjusted fast enough to absorb the output. The CNMC blackout proceedings running in parallel underline that Iberian grid management already faces stress beyond price dynamics. For gas-fired operators the consequence is direct: midday clean spark spreads in Spain are now deeply negative, so CCGTs cannot clear on their own economics and must lean on capacity mechanisms or simply not run, while the overnight and morning windows still hold positive spark spread.

France's 3 June collapse into single digits gives the northward spread its sharper forward edge. That print is the first time the same mechanism has reached a market large enough to set the FR-DE spread record , and the Italy-Spain compression events of early May trace the same arc. As Germany adds solar under the Energiewende trajectory, the dynamic eventually reaches its grid too, collapsing the gas-set marginal unit during peak solar hours and compressing the FR-DE spread from the German side rather than the French. For Iberian desks the Q1 data recalibrates the negative-price premium in day-ahead options; for Continental desks it is a leading indicator the French print has just confirmed as present, not theoretical.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Spain's electricity price went negative for 397 hours in the first three months of 2026, meaning suppliers had to pay buyers to take power rather than receive payment. This happened because solar panels generated far more electricity than Spain needed during midday hours , eight times more frequently than in the same period of 2025. When supply cannot be switched off and demand cannot absorb it, prices go below zero. The same pattern is now appearing in France and other northern European countries as solar capacity grows, with France recording its own extreme low of EUR 8.96 per megawatt-hour on 3 June 2026.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Spanish gas-fired operators faced structurally uneconomic midday clean spark spreads for 18% of Q1 hours, accelerating dependence on capacity mechanism payments as a business-model backstop.

    Short term · Reported
  • Risk

    As solar penetration spreads north into France and Germany, Continental CCGT economics will face the same midday compression that Spanish operators encountered at scale in Q1 2026, undermining the investment case for new gas capacity across the EU.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    Negative price hours create a structural commercial case for battery storage and demand-response aggregators in Spain; operators who can capture and discharge negative-price surplus during peak windows will capture the value that gas plants cannot.

    Medium term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #15 · France EUR 9, Germany EUR 103: heat splits

Euronews· 4 Jun 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Spain logs 397 negative-price hours in Q1
Spain's negative-price proliferation is the leading indicator of a solar-penetration squeeze spreading north: the midday surplus that collapsed French day-ahead into single digits on 3 June is the Continental expression of a phenomenon Spain hit at scale a quarter earlier.
Different Perspectives
Energy Aspects (sell-side trading desk)
Energy Aspects (sell-side trading desk)
The freight market has priced the routing story more honestly than the flat price: Med Aframax bid hard, VLCC flat, distillate crack firming alongside crude, MR TC2 at a 7-month low. The positioning data (NYMEX WTI net short -26,694) confirms the 8 June Brent spike was a short-squeeze, not a conviction rally, with no long base to defend.
UK DESNZ / European refinery regulators
UK DESNZ / European refinery regulators
The UK's decision around 21 May to reopen the Russian-derived distillate import window self-destructs on the same 17 June GL 134C clock, meaning the policy reversal that gave European refiners a short-term margin relief is now contingent on OFAC issuing a successor licence. MR TC2 at $2,400/day shuts the transatlantic product arb, removing the US distillate fallback simultaneously.
Kuwait Petroleum Corporation
Kuwait Petroleum Corporation
KPC's marketing chief told the S&P Global conference on 3 June that full output recovery requires 10-12 weeks after any Hormuz reopening, with Kuwait producing just 490kbd in May against pre-war levels. That timeline provides a hard floor under every ceasefire-rally price fade.
India downstream
India downstream
India had structured an Oman supply deal specifically around the non-Hormuz Mina Al Fahal route; the 5 June drone strike eliminated that corridor and now puts Indian refiners at risk of losing Russian crude cover if GL 134C lapses without a successor on 17 June. Indian refiners are the primary off-take for Russian crude under the current waiver architecture.
China state refiners
China state refiners
Chinese crude imports fell again in the period covered, and Iranian Light flipped to a discount to Brent, sustaining the EFS-compression-is-a-China-demand-hole read from the prior briefing. Beijing has not moved to fill the seaborne gap, leaving the Brent-Dubai EFS as the live indicator of when Chinese buying returns.
US Treasury / State Department
US Treasury / State Department
Secretary of State Rubio broke the monthly GL-134 roll routine on 7 June by stating the US wants to end Russian oil waivers 'as soon as we possibly can', with no GL 134D announced ahead of the 17 June cliff. The simultaneous GL 131F clock on Lukoil-ISAB puts two European crude-supply constraints under the same fortnight of OFAC decision-making.