In March almost 72 percent of the electricity consumed in Lithuania was imported. Import from Latvia, Estonia and Scandinavia increased by 20 percent, while import of electricity from Russia dropped by 41 percent.
In March the average electricity price in Sweden’s SE4 trading zone was 26 EUR/MWh. The average electricity price in Finland fell by 11 percent to 29 EUR/MWh. The Olkiluoto 2 power plant worked throughout March, generating almost one third more electricity than in February, thus increasing supply and lowering the price in the Finnish market. The lower electricity price in Finland also influenced the average electricity price in Estonia, which experienced the 10 percent drop to 30 EUR/MWh.
In March the average electricity price in Poland was 33 EUR/MWh, which was 9 percent lower than in February. The lower price was due to the increased wind power output in Germany and Poland and a significant (26 percent) increase in the import of electricity from Sweden.
“The average electricity price in the whole Baltic sea region fell in March by single or even double digit percentage figures. It is noteworthy that the highest price for the month was in Poland, where on average the electricity price was one euro higher per megawatt-hour than in Lithuania,” said Robertas Staniulis, Head of the Litgrid Market Development Division.
In the Scandinavian bidding area, the average electricity price on the Nord Pool Spot market fell by almost 13 percent (compared to February) to 25 EUR/MWh, which was 5 percent lower than in March last year. Compared to February in Germany the electricity price fell by 15 percent to 31 EUR/MWh. A 20 percent increase in the wind power generation, especially in the first few and the last few days of the month, was responsible for the lower price. On 1 March and again on 29-30 March, the price on the electricity market turned negative during the night, while the average price on those days was just 14 EUR/MWh.
From 6 to 12 April, the capacities of the Latvian-Estonian interconnection capacity was used on average 95 percent, the Lithuanian-Latvian interconnectors – by 82 percent and the Lithuania-Belarus capacity – by 20 percent.
Be the first to comment