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EU against Belarus power imports

  • Market: Electricity
  • 11/02/21

The European Commission is exploring measures aimed at preventing power imports from Belarus through Russia.

"We do not have evidence that would confirm that electricity sold to the Baltic market by Russia would have been imported from Belarus. But we are looking closely at all information available on trade flows," said Kadri Simson, EU energy commissioner.

She added that physical flows are "unavoidable" because Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are still connected to Russia and Belarus through the former Soviet Union grid. "That is why we need to address this problem through synchronisation with the EU continental grid," Simson told the European parliament.

Simson said the commission is seeking ways to implement a December 2020 call by EU leaders to prohibit nuclear power imports from third countries that do not fulfil EU-recognised nuclear safety standards. Baltic countries and EU leaders have expressed safety concerns over Belarus' two VVER-1200 units, with a combined capacity of 2.4GW.

The commission is "closely" exploring, together with Baltic countries, temporary regional measures before the region's planned synchronisation with the continental European power grid in 2025.

"Such measures include robust certificates of the origin of electricity imported from third countries or defining a grid use tariff also for import flows," Simson said.

The European parliament today adopted a resolution, by a large majority, calling on the commission to propose measures to suspend electricity trade with Belarus compliant with obligations under international trade, energy and nuclear law in order to "ensure that electricity produced in the Ostrovets plant does not enter the EU energy market while Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are still connected" to the same grid as Russia and Belarus.


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German gas demand edges up in 2024

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Gas-fired generation increased year on year despite renewables making up a record 62pc of German power generation. Fossil fuel generation was used to meet 17.1GW of power demand in 2024, down from 19.3GW in 2023. While overall power demand remained roughly unchanged from a year earlier, Germany lifted power imports, pushing down domestic generation ( see power mix graph ). But gas increased its share of the thermal mix, partly on lignite and coal plant closures as Germany's coal phase-out progresses. Gas prices at the bottom of the coal-to-gas fuel-switching range for most of the year until the fourth quarter, even outperforming lignite plants in January-July, supported the call on gas for dispatchable generation. Recent gas price rises have put coal and lignite firmly ahead of gas in the power-generation merit order for all forward periods until 2026, suggesting scope for the share of gas in thermal output to be lower this year. By Till Stehr German power generation mix by year GW TTF versus LPG prices, energy equivalence basis $/mn Btu Monthly year-on-year change in gas demand by sector GWh/d German gas demand by year TWh/d Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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06/01/25

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02/01/25

Italian gas-fired output down as RES grow in 2024

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