European power traders look to different sources of data
European power traders have had a trying time over the past few years, as an onslaught of generation from renewable sources has fundamentally changed the continent's energy mix. While natural gas, coal and nuclear power were once the preferred means of electricity generation in Europe, heavy subsidies have caused renewables – including solar, wind and hydropower – to account for a rapidly growing share.
Renewable energy is intermittent – in other words, it cannot be turned on all the time – and
More on Electricity
Interest in battery and flexibility soars in European energy markets
Energy traders are structuring bespoke contracts around Bess and flexibility that facilitate new ways of managing and sharing risk in this nascent market
Axpo interview: the rise of flexibility contracts in European power
Axpo’s Domenico Franceschino talks to Energy Risk about flexibility contracts, battery optimisation and the role of risk management in valuing these bespoke products
US power markets grapple with surging AI demand
Through rising demand and increased market participation, technology giants are transforming US power markets
CRO interview: Shawnie McBride
NRG’s chief risk officer Shawnie McBride discusses the challenges of increasingly interconnected risks, fostering a risk culture and her most useful working habits
Energy Risk Europe Leaders’ Network: geopolitical risk
Energy Risk’s European Leaders’ Network had its first meeting in November to discuss the risks posed to energy firms by recent geopolitical developments
Energy Risk US Leaders’ Network: tackling volatility
Energy Risk’s inaugural US Leaders’ Network convened in Houston in October to discuss risk management challenges caused by geopolitical upheaval, policy uncertainty and volatility
Uncertainty causes rethink on clean energy investment
Waning enthusiasm for net-zero pledges, environmental policy shifts, funding cuts and US tariffs are causing clean energy investors to retreat
Interview: Nodal Exchange’s Paul Cusenza
The fundamentals driving electricity prices, growing confidence in state-driven environmental programmes and Nodal’s share of the US zonal power markets