| The Balkan region is set to be short of electricity until  Sunday (19th February), as cold weather and plant outages are persisting longer  than expected. The supply balance is now not expected to ease until next week,  when warmer temperatures are forecast, rather than this week, as predicted  earlier.Traded prices are sliding from the record highs reached earlier during the  cold snap, but electricity remains much more expensive than at the start of the  winter.
 BulgariaBulgarian cross-border electricity links will be closed until next week, as  coal reserves fuelling power plants in the country have not yet been restored.
 Supply has been further curbed by an emergency outage at the 670MW AES  Galabovo thermal power station, Bulgarian energy minister Traycho Traykov told  Bulgarian National Television on Wednesday (15th February).
 One of the units at the plant was off line and the second worked at only  50% capacity, according to Traykov.
 "Until the weather improves and/or all coal reserves are restored, the  borders will remain closed. However, I think some time next week, Bulgaria will  resume [electricity] exports," he said.
 Earlier this week, Traykov had said electricity interconnections could  reopen this week if coal extraction from the Maritsa East mines rose to 100%  capacity, but this has not yet happened (see EDEM 13  February 2012).
 Balkan power traders reported some activity on Bulgarian broker screens on  Wednesday (15th February), with separate offers appearing for March `12, Q2 `12  and Q3 `12 Baseload deliveries.
 Bids and offers have sporadically appeared on brokers` screens since the  start of the year − an encouraging sign for this highly illiquid market,  according to market sources.
 RomaniaRomania continued to experience severe weather conditions and electricity  export capacity was cut during most of the day, according to one Romanian  trader.
 With all domestic production locked into the home market, Day-ahead  Baseload prices on the country`s electricity exchange OPCOM fell to Romania New  Lei 355.13/MWh (€81.55/MWh) on Wednesday (15th February) - down 7% day on day,  but still above the record-high hit on the exchange before the current cold  snap inflated prices.
 SerbiaThe Serbian electricity market has been undersupplied, but the government  said on Tuesday (14th February) that the situation had been brought under  control. Electricity supplies should go back to normal next Monday, when  weather conditions are expected to improve.
 However, the public is still advised to save as much electricity as  possible, as it will take time to restore energy reserves.
 On Tuesday (14th February), Serbian electricity consumption fell below  150GWh for the first time since last week, and coal supply from the Kolubara  mines has been restored, state-owned power incumbent EPS said on Wednesday  (15th February).
 However, hydroelectricity stocks have not risen, so the reservoirs will  have to be used strategically.
 The ongoing shortages were reflected in Serbian Day-ahead trading. Thursday  (16th February) Baseload last dealt at €135.00/MWh and Friday (17th February)  Baseload at €143.00/MWh.
 Balkan traders agreed that, until milder temperatures have stabilised,  prices would remain very high compared with the winter-to-date average.
 On Monday (13th February), EPS received priority access to all cross-border  transmission capacity under a government order, in response to the ongoing  state of energy emergency (see EDEM 13  February 2012).
 MacedoniaMeasures to cut Macedonian electricity consumption remain in place, but the  system is stable, and there has been a 4% decrease in demand since Sunday, the  government said on Tuesday (14th February).
 The state is considering switching on the 210MW Negotino thermal power  plant in order to meet domestic consumption needs.
 The country was forced to cut its export capacity on Monday (13th February)  until the end of the month because of the freezing weather (see 13 February  2012).
 Greece(THE ICIS  HEREN REPORTS - EDEM 16032 / 15 February 2012)Greece will stop electricity exports on Thursday (16th February) for an  unlimited period following shortages in its natural gas system.
 ICIS Heren understands that up to 900MW of gas-fired capacity owned by  incumbent PPC and private outfits are off line, as the country is actively  seeking to buy LNG in order to balance the currently tight system.
 |