Europe’s heatwave drives electricity prices to new highs as demand soars

The heatwave has prompted a sharp rise in electricity prices across European markets as millions turn to air conditioners and electric fans to battle record high temperatures, which have also caused a string of power plant outages across the continent.
Great Britain imported electricity from Europe at more than six times the normal price on Tuesday as the high-pressure heat dome has slowed wind speeds, hitting renewable energy generation, and led to outages at multiple gas plants across the country.
The heatwave has caused windfarms on the continent to slow, and led to lower output at some nuclear plants in France, where high riverwater temperatures are making it more difficult to cool the reactors.
The combination of rising electricity demand and falling generation across Europe has caused market prices to climb to multi-year highs.
Great Britain’s energy system operator has resorted to paying about £470 per megawatt-hour to secure electricity imports from the continent between 5pm and 7pm on Tuesday to help meet the country’s peak electricity demand.
These prices are more than six times the electricity market price in June last year, which averaged about £71 per megawatt-hour, and more than three times the market price of £123 on Monday.
In Germany, Europe’s biggest electricity market, power market prices were forecast to reach highs of more than €545/MWh on Tuesday evening, the highest since June 2024, according to the Epex Spot exchange.
In France, which is bracing for temperatures of up to 43C (109F) this week, the power market price has climbed to over €268/MWh, the highest since August 2023.
Shivam Malhotra, head of power trading at the consultancy LCP Delta, said it was “not unusual” to see a string of unplanned outages at British gas plants, which “tend to really struggle in extreme temperatures”.
Five gas plants reported that they would need to reduce their output due to “ambient” conditions, cutting about 2.5 gigawatts from the UK’s gas fleet or enough electricity to power 2.5m UK homes. The loss of capacity is about 40% higher than before the heatwave, according to Malhotra.
Solar farms typically generate less power in very high temperatures, as rising panel heat reduces efficiency. But the clear skies across most of the UK helped to compensate for this loss, keeping solar output steady at about 14GW or 35% of the UK’s total generation.
Meanwhile, wind power output fell due to the high pressure weather system, which has slowed wind speeds and is expected to set a new record for June temperatures in the UK. Wind power made up between 13% and 15% of the UK’s electricity on Tuesday, compared with an average of about 30% in June last year.
“Wind speeds are lower too, so the energy system operator has secured around 1.5 gigawatts of extra electricity to help meet the evening peak. This is likely to come from the continent, which is having its own problems due to the heatwave,” Malhotra said.
Households are also expected to play a role in helping the UK energy system to cope with the heatwave, by cutting their energy use to save about 115 megawatts of electricity during peak hours through a scheme that pays users to cut their demand.
A spokesperson for the National Energy System Operator, which is owned by the government, said: “While the hot weather has affected electricity market prices in Great Britain and across Europe, balancing actions of this nature are a routine part of operating the electricity system.”
Read the full story at The Guardian ↗
A heatwave across Europe has created a supply-demand imbalance in electricity markets. Millions using air conditioning has spiked demand, while generation has fallen: wind output declined due to high-pressure weather, nuclear plants in France struggled with river cooling water temperatures, and multiple gas plants in Britain reduced output due to heat stress on equipment. On Tuesday, Great Britain's system operator paid approximately £470 per megawatt-hour to import electricity between 5–7pm to meet peak demand—roughly six times the June 2023 average of £71/MWh. German power prices reached over €545/MWh, the highest since June 2024; French prices climbed above €268/MWh, the highest since August 2023. The UK's gas fleet lost about 2.5 gigawatts of capacity (40% above normal reduction levels), while wind generation fell to 13–15% of the mix from a typical 30% in June. Solar generation held steady around 14 gigawatts due to clear skies offsetting heat-related panel efficiency losses. The system operator secured 1.5 additional gigawatts of emergency capacity and encouraged demand reduction through a household incentive scheme.
Read the full story at The Guardian ↗
The heatwave has prompted a sharp rise in electricity prices across European markets as millions turn to air conditioners and electric fans to battle record high temperatures, which have also caused a string of power plant outages across the continent.
Great Britain imported electricity from Europe at more than six times the normal price on Tuesday as the high-pressure heat dome has slowed wind speeds, hitting renewable energy generation, and led to outages at multiple gas plants across the country.
The heatwave has caused windfarms on the continent to slow, and led to lower output at some nuclear plants in France, where high riverwater temperatures are making it more difficult to cool the reactors.
The combination of rising electricity demand and falling generation across Europe has caused market prices to climb to multi-year highs.
Great Britain’s energy system operator has resorted to paying about £470 per megawatt-hour to secure electricity imports from the continent between 5pm and 7pm on Tuesday to help meet the country’s peak electricity demand.
These prices are more than six times the electricity market price in June last year, which averaged about £71 per megawatt-hour, and more than three times the market price of £123 on Monday.
In Germany, Europe’s biggest electricity market, power market prices were forecast to reach highs of more than €545/MWh on Tuesday evening, the highest since June 2024, according to the Epex Spot exchange.
In France, which is bracing for temperatures of up to 43C (109F) this week, the power market price has climbed to over €268/MWh, the highest since August 2023.
Shivam Malhotra, head of power trading at the consultancy LCP Delta, said it was “not unusual” to see a string of unplanned outages at British gas plants, which “tend to really struggle in extreme temperatures”.
Five gas plants reported that they would need to reduce their output due to “ambient” conditions, cutting about 2.5 gigawatts from the UK’s gas fleet or enough electricity to power 2.5m UK homes. The loss of capacity is about 40% higher than before the heatwave, according to Malhotra.
Solar farms typically generate less power in very high temperatures, as rising panel heat reduces efficiency. But the clear skies across most of the UK helped to compensate for this loss, keeping solar output steady at about 14GW or 35% of the UK’s total generation.
Meanwhile, wind power output fell due to the high pressure weather system, which has slowed wind speeds and is expected to set a new record for June temperatures in the UK. Wind power made up between 13% and 15% of the UK’s electricity on Tuesday, compared with an average of about 30% in June last year.
“Wind speeds are lower too, so the energy system operator has secured around 1.5 gigawatts of extra electricity to help meet the evening peak. This is likely to come from the continent, which is having its own problems due to the heatwave,” Malhotra said.
Households are also expected to play a role in helping the UK energy system to cope with the heatwave, by cutting their energy use to save about 115 megawatts of electricity during peak hours through a scheme that pays users to cut their demand.
A spokesperson for the National Energy System Operator, which is owned by the government, said: “While the hot weather has affected electricity market prices in Great Britain and across Europe, balancing actions of this nature are a routine part of operating the electricity system.”
Read the full story at The Guardian ↗
A heatwave has prompted sharp rises in electricity prices across European markets Millions are turning to air conditioners and electric fans to battle record high temperatures High-pressure heat dome has slowed wind speeds, hitting renewable energy generation Multiple gas plants across Britain have experienced outages High river water temperatures in France are making it more difficult to cool nuclear reactors Great Britain's system operator paid £470/MWh for electricity imports on Tuesday between 5pm–7pm This represents more than six times the June 2023 market average of £71/MWh German power market prices reached over €545/MWh on Tuesday evening, the highest since June 2024 French power market prices climbed above €268/MWh, the highest since August 2023 Five British gas plants reduced output due to ambient heat conditions, cutting 2.5 gigawatts of capacity This loss is about 40% higher than before the heatwave Clear skies across the UK helped solar output remain steady at about 14GW (35% of total generation) Wind power made up 13–15% of UK electricity on Tuesday, compared with 30% average in June 2023 Gas plants tend to really struggle in extreme temperatures The balancing actions taken are a routine part of operating the electricity system
Read the full story at The Guardian ↗
- A European heatwave has driven electricity prices to multi-year highs as cooling demand surges while renewable and nuclear generation fall
- Great Britain paid £470/MWh for emergency imports on Tuesday—over six times June 2023 prices—due to reduced wind output and multiple gas plant outages from heat stress
- France and Germany's power markets hit their highest prices in months as nuclear plants face cooling difficulties and wind generation drops across the continent