The Nordic power exchange recorded a system price of 39.67 euros per megawatt-hour in February, with prices in Finland, Sweden, Norway and Estonia staying below 40 euros. The average price in the NPS Estonia price area was 39.82 euros, compared to NPS ELE’s 41.47, NPS Lithuania’s 42.94 and NPS Finland’s 39.43 euros per megawatt-hour. For 77 percent of all hours, the market price of electricity was equal in Estonia and Finland.
The hydro reservoir level, which is the greatest factor contributing to the price of electricity in the Nordics, was 18 percent lower this February than it was at the same time in 2012, and Norway’s electrical system changed from an exporter to an importer. Despite this, there was no shortage of generating capacity among the regions, nor a noticeable shortage of transmission capacity, except for the Danish and NPS ELE regions.
In Latvia, domestic production covered 81 percent of consumption in February. In Lithuania that figure was only 35 percent, meaning that most of the electricity was imported from neighbouring countries. As the Estonian and NPS ELE prices were more affordable than the NPS Lithuania price, exports from Estonia to both Latvia and Lithuania increased. Because of this, the Estonian-Latvian border had a shortage of transmission capacity for 173 hours. In Estonia, all of the electricity required to cover domestic consumption was purchased in the market.