Why OE-governed quality assurance...

In every mature renewable market, there comes a moment when engineering quality—once assumed,...

Insurance, force majeure and...

In the early stages of Southeast Europe’s renewable expansion, wind investors focused primarily...

ESG, community strategy and...

For years, wind investment strategies in Southeast Europe focused almost exclusively on technical...

The grid-ready wind farm...

A decade ago, the success of a wind farm in Southeast Europe was...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsHungary, Drop in...

Hungary, Drop in spot gas price on CEEEGEX to 55.32 euros per MWh on Tuesday

The weighted average spot price of gas on the Hungarian CEEGEX stock exchange fell on Tuesday, February 14, to a new minimum this year – 55.32 euros per MWh. In the previous seven days, it continuously recorded a decrease, from 61.6 euros per MWh, which was recorded on February 8.

Two weeks ago, next-day gas prices on CEEGEX fell to around €57.2 per MWh, the lowest level in at least 14 months.

In January, the spot price of gas remained below the threshold of 77 euros per MWh and has been declining almost continuously, except in the first week of February – when it rose from 57 euros per MWh to around 61 euros per MWh.

The downward trend in the price of gas started in mid-December – thus, on December 14, 2022, gas was traded for 128.55 euros per MWh, and in the first days of January, the price dropped to 70.8 euros per MWh.

Trading volume on the day-ahead market has fluctuated significantly over the past seven days, ranging from 48,000 MWh on Tuesday to 109,000 MWh in the middle of last week.

The last intraday market transactions on CEEGEX were realized on February 14 at an average weighted price of around 54 euros per MWh.

Sign up for updates & special reports

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Why OE-governed quality assurance is becoming the new currency of wind asset value in Southeast Europe

In every mature renewable market, there comes a moment when engineering quality—once assumed, often overlooked—becomes the defining currency of asset value. Southeast Europe is entering that moment now. Serbia, Romania, Croatia, and Montenegro are witnessing a scale-up in wind...

Insurance, force majeure and financial risk transfer — the new architecture of protection for wind investors in Southeast Europe

In the early stages of Southeast Europe’s renewable expansion, wind investors focused primarily on EPC contracts, turbine warranties, and revenue support mechanisms. Insurance was treated as a formal requirement—necessary for lenders, but rarely integrated into strategic project design. That...

ESG, community strategy and social license — the hidden financial drivers of wind success in Southeast Europe

For years, wind investment strategies in Southeast Europe focused almost exclusively on technical variables: resource quality, EPC pricing, grid access, and financing structure. But as markets mature, a new set of forces is emerging—less visible than capex or P50...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!