⚡Energy Newsletter
April 6, 2026 · 06:33 Uhr
1Renewable Energy Reaches 53% Electricity Share in Q1 2026
BDEW, Stromauskunft, Solarserver, NDR Germany covers more than half of electricity consumption through renewable energy (53% in Q1 2026) for the first time, with wind and solar as main drivers. Gross electricity generation from renewables increased by over 15% compared to Q1 2025. This demonstrates measurable progress in the energy transition, but simultaneously reveals critical supply gaps during wind lulls and seasonal fluctuations.
2Gas Prices at 6x US Level: Iran Crisis Threatens Energy Supply
r/EU_Economics (74pts), Politico, CSMonitor, RWE-Vorstand Spot gas prices in Germany have risen to over €60/MWh – approximately 6x higher than in the USA – driven by the Iran war and supply bottlenecks. RWE CEO warns of potential price increases; German gas supply is threatened. This drives electricity prices up via the merit-order mechanism and endangers industrial competitiveness.
3Grid Expansion Critical: Ultranet by End of 2026, A-Nord Delayed to 2027
Amprion/Zeit, Amprion, Windkraft-Journal The Ultranet project is scheduled for completion by end of 2026, with A-Nord following in 2027. Despite grid expansion, massive congestion costs continue due to insufficient transport capacity between north and south. The TSOs demand increased cost-sharing by green power generators for grid expansion – a conflict-prone model.
4Electricity Market Design Debate: Merit-Order Principle versus Decoupling
r/Energiewirtschaft (82-89pts), r/climatechange (56pts) Expert debates reveal criticism of the merit-order price mechanism: gas prices artificially set high electricity prices despite wind and solar having marginal costs. Experts discuss decoupling models and alternative electricity market designs as solutions. Missing political solutions amplify industry's competitive disadvantage against USA/China.
5EU Court Confirms E.ON/RWE Acquisition Despite 9 Objections
Concurrences (EU Court of Justice), März 2026 The European Court of Justice rejected 9 objections from municipal energy suppliers against the EU approval of the EVH/enercity acquisition by E.ON/RWE. This consolidates market power among large energy corporations while municipal utilities lose their spheres of influence. For the energy transition, this means increased centralization instead of local energy communities.
Situation Report
Germany is in a critical transition crisis of its energy transformation: renewable energy reaches record shares (53%), yet simultaneous gas price shocks (Iran conflict) and insufficient grid infrastructure (congestion costs, delayed power highways) threaten supply security and industrial competitiveness. The merit-order price design intensifies the price dilemma, while market concentration (E.ON/RWE merger) pushes back decentralized energy solutions. Geopolitically, a dual vulnerability emerges: technological (fluctuations without storage) and geopolitical (gas dependence amid Middle East instability).
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