US retreat hits European trading
German trading volumes in electricity for 2002 dropped by around 41% on 2001 figures. While the exchanges – particularly the European Energy Exchange (EEX) – performed well, 90% of German power trades are done over-the-counter, and the loss of the US market-makers such as Dynegy and Enron was blamed for the reduced liquidity.
Until the departure of Enron in December 2001, the German market had been growing fast – some 10 times the 530 terawatt hours of actual power consumption was
More on Risk management
Asian banks close out energy clients as Iran war bites
Firms with short jet fuel positions faced losses up to $100 million as initial margin soared 566%
How AI agents can join the dots for risk managers
Citi risk expert outlines agentic AI tool that would pull together structured and unstructured data on trading and lending approvals to create single, unified view of risk
In Iran war, VAR models ease cliff effect on Ice and CME margins
At 105%, EEX – using Span model – saw largest single-day jump compared with those CCPs
Newcomer of the year: Abaxx Exchange
Energy Risk Awards 2026: New exchange sets out to modernise commodity derivatives by aligning them to physical markets
AI project of the year: SOCAR Türkiye
Energy Risk Awards 2026: Risk team harnesses AI to transform RCSA into a scalable, sustainable and internally owned capability
Data, cyber and model risk top IT concerns for risk managers: survey
Energy Risk software survey reveals risk managers’ tech pain points and plans
Energy Risk Debates: the Iran conflict and the widening mandate of the risk manager
Panellists discuss the impact of the Middle East crisis so far on risk teams and the drive towards enterprise risk management
Abaxx: meeting the need for new commodity derivatives
Abaxx revamps commodity hedging with a suite of modern contracts