⚡Energy Newsletter
June 28, 2026 · 06:30 Uhr
1Electricity prices fall 6.7% – Renewables reach 55% share
EnergyPrices.net Germany's electricity market in 2026 records a price decrease of 6.7% while renewable energy rises to a 55% share. RWE predicts further price reductions through declining generation costs and stable gas supply. Industrial subsidy programs support energy-intensive sectors.
2RWE takes over Amprion – Network consolidation advances
WirtschaftsWoche RWE acquires transmission system operator Amprion and becomes a network infrastructure player alongside electricity generation. Amprion remains the only TSO without state involvement, while Tennet, 50Hertz, and TransnetBW already have public shareholdings. Strategic move for energy transition control.
3Network congestion reform 2026: Maturity level procedure relieves investors
Sunshine Energy All four German transmission system operators introduce a new maturity level procedure as of 2026 to ease network connection bottlenecks. New regulations enable more flexible connection options for wind and solar investors. Key reform for accelerated renewables expansion.
4Wind power expansion doubles – 22 GW annually planned from 2026
NDR.de Germany plans to double annual wind power installations to 22 GW from 2026 (2022: 7.2 GW). Offshore projects by RWE, Vattenfall, and EnBW in the North and Baltic Seas are scheduled to begin construction in 2026. Central to the 55% renewables target, but grid capacity remains a bottleneck.
5Superconducting current limiters stabilize high-voltage networks
pv magazine Deutschland KIT, Siemens Energy, and all four TSOs develop CURL380 technology for superconducting current limiters to protect against network faults. Solves critical network stability problems with high renewables share. Field test with high-voltage equipment manufacturer HSP Hochspannungsgeräte.
Situation Report
Germany's energy market in 2026 is in a critical transformation phase: electricity prices fall to 55% renewable share despite high renewable penetration, while network infrastructure is massively strained by doubling wind power expansion (22 GW/year). The RWE-Amprion takeover signals a consolidation trend among network operators under pressure from state involvement in competitors. Geopolitical gas price volatility (TTF futures at €47/MWh) remains a price driver despite high renewables share, revealing the structural market design problem of merit-order binding to fossil fuels. Critically from a security perspective: technological dependence on network stabilization and delays in expanding storage and flexibility technologies threaten supply security.
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