EU gas-fired power generation increased on the year for the first time since January, as renewable output dropped.
Output jumped to 39.6TWh in November, from 27.6TWh a year earlier and 25.5TWh in October, according to data from Fraunhofer ISE. Gas-fired generation accounted for 19pc of the power mix in November, up from 13pc from a year earlier.
A drop in almost all types of renewable generation led to the increase in gas-fired power output. Wind generation fell to 36.3TWh in November, from 44.7TWh a year earlier. Hydro generation also dropped to 22.8TWh, from 31.4TWh in November 2023. Only biomass generation and solar generation increased from last year. Solar generation reached 9.4TWh in November, up from 7.6TWh, and biomass generation rose to 6.7TWh, from 5.7TWh.
Despite the significant increase in gas-fired generation and favourable generation conditions for coal fired and lignite-fired power plants caused by high gas prices, coal and lignite generation remained largely unchanged on the year. Coal generation edged down to 12.6TWh last month, from 12.7TWh a year earlier, and lignite generation edged up to 15.6TWh, from 15.3TWh.
EU power demand was 209.5TWh in November, slightly down from 210.7TWh a year earlier but up from 200TWh in October.
Gas-fired output increased across all countries in the EU, apart from France, where it remained stable (see table). France's power generation is less dependent on renewables than other countries because of its large nuclear fleet.
Gas-fired power generation by country | TWh | |
Country | Nov-23 | Nov-24 |
Spain | 3.26 | 4.75 |
France | 2.60 | 2.62 |
Italy | 6.88 | 9.87 |
Germany | 4.45 | 6.44 |
— Fraunhofer ISE |