Brexit Electricity Market: A Complex Web Threatening Green Energy Ambitions

  • 📰 ftenergy
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 80 sec. here
  • 9 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 56%
  • Publisher: 63%

Business News

BREXIT,ENERGY MARKET,TRADING

A post-Brexit electricity market system, fraught with complexity and inefficiencies, threatens to hinder both UK and EU interests, particularly in the emerging field of renewable energy.

In the wake of Brexit, Europe is understandably reluctant to allow Britain to have its cake and eat it when it comes to trade arrangements. In the electricity market, such caution risks leaving both sides worse off. There are good reasons to favor a simple trading agreement. At the peak of the 2022 European energy crisis, electricity traded between the UK and European Union helped keep Europe’s lights on.

However, Brexit has created inefficiencies that cost the UK an estimated £250 million in 2021. Roughly speaking, when the UK was in the EU internal energy market, a computer algorithm determined the most cost-efficient way to trade electricity. This still happens in the EU. But traders in Britain now use a more complex system called ‘explicit trading,’ where capacity on subsea cables and electricity generation are auctioned separately — like buying a product but booking delivery apart. An alternative known as ‘multi-region loose volume coupling’ has proven as complex as its name suggests. A recent European working paper acknowledged this replacement system may not be ready before June 2026, when the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation (TCA) Agreement expires and energy relations must be reviewed. Renewable energy raises the stakes. A group of countries around the North Sea — as well as companies including the UK’s National Grid and Belgium’s Elia Group — want to expand power trading across Europe through an offshore ‘green energy hub’. This would link wind farms in the North Sea via subsea cables not just to one country (as at present) but several so their output could flow to where demand, and prices, were higher. But the imperfections of post-Brexit electricity market arrangements are making some potential investors behind the green energy hub nervous, owing to the difficulties they create in forecasting possible revenues. It’s a prime example of where pragmatism should trump politics in this year’s UK-EU ‘reset’ talks. The mood music is not encouraging

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

 /  🏆 47. in AU
 

Thank you for your comment. Your comment will be published after being reviewed.
Please try again later.

Australia Australia Latest News, Australia Australia Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Huge manufacturing complex near IKEA store goes to marketIt sits on a plot of land roughly the same size as six football pitches
Source: nottslive - 🏆 96. / 52 Read more »

China Dominates Global Auto Market: EVs and Market Share GainsChina has rapidly ascended to become the world leader in car production and exports, particularly in electric vehicles (EVs). The country's market share has surged from 1% to 39% in two decades, fueled by government investment, automation advancements, and a booming domestic market.
Source: OilandEnergy - 🏆 34. / 68 Read more »

Shrewsbury Market Aims for Three-Peat in Britain's Favourite Market CompetitionShrewsbury Market Hall seeks to win the Britain's Favourite Market title for the third consecutive year. The market, run jointly by Shropshire Council and Shrewsbury Town Council, faces competition from Market Drayton Market, which has undergone significant improvements under the management of Kate Gittins, formerly of Shrewsbury Market Hall.
Source: ShropshireStar - 🏆 98. / 51 Read more »