This electricity price This Monday, the first business day of 2023, will recover Except for the five autonomous communities of Andalusia, Aragón, Asturias, Castilla y León and the Region of Murcia. 114.24 Euro/megawatt hour (MWh)After five days under 100, it’s about 108 euros more than on New Year’s.
The price is the result of applying a temporary adjustment to the 112.55 Euro/MWh registered on the wholesale market, which the gas ceiling users have to pay to compensate the facilities that use this raw material to generate electricity, this amount will be 1.69 Euro. after a few negative sessions.
From not havingIberian mechanism‘Strictly limiting the price of natural gas for electricity generation, the wholesale price for this Monday is 139.36 Euro/MWh, approx. 25 euros higher, according to Iberian Electricity Market Operator (OMIE) and Iberian Gas Market (Mibgas) data. According to sources confirmed to EFE from the Ministry of Ecological Transition, this calculation already applies the new gas cap of 45 euros, which has been in effect since 1 January.
put 114.24 Euro/MWh Ending a five-day winning streak under €100electricity beat its 2022 minimum twice in a row: 5.47 euros/MWh on 30 December and 1.82 euros/MWh on New Year’s Eve.
The value of this monday round, in addition, levels in the middle of last monthThe first employee of 2022 was paid on average on Monday, although it was about 24% cheaper than at 150.5 euros when paid at 115.72 euros on the 18th of MWh.
According to the time bands and excluding the adjustment, the electricity will reach its target. Highest price between 18:00 – 19:00It will be paid 174.74 Euro/MWh, with a minimum of 42 Euros between 02:00 and 03:00.
Spain is no exception to the Old Continent, which has generally outstripped the economic prices of recent days. Again, Italy will be among the countries with the most expensive MWh, with an average of 202.04 euros, followed by the United Kingdom with 162.12 pounds (about 183 euros). France and Germany also exceeded the 100 euro threshold at 124.58 euros and 123.82 euros MWh, respectively.
In Portugal, where the ‘Iberian mechanism’ is also applied, the ‘pool’ price – without adjustments – will be slightly lower than in Spain on 31 December and will remain at 110.08 euro/MWh.