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						Savvy European utilities shield themselves from higher 
						carbon costs
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		 [August 30, 2018] 
		 By Vera Eckert and Nina Chestney 
 FRANKFURT/LONDON (Reuters) - The surging 
		costs of carbon permits have caused some of Europe's biggest utilities 
		to lock in purchases in advance, while nuclear and hydro firms are 
		benefiting from the knock-on effect on power prices.
 
 Carbon permits traded under the EU's Emissions Trading System (ETS) have 
		become the best performing commodity this year, almost trebling in price 
		to over 21 euros ($25) a ton since January on the back of stronger 
		energy prices and measures to reduce supply.
 
 The ETS, which charges power plants and factories for every ton of 
		carbon dioxide they emit, has suffered from excess supply since the 
		financial crisis which dragged prices down to lows of 2-3 euros a ton.
 
 Now at 10-year highs, stronger carbon prices make it more expensive for 
		European utilities to burn fossil fuels, encouraging a shift to cleaner 
		energy sources.
 
 Prices are expected to keep rising, according to a Reuters survey of 
		analysts last month.
 
		
		 
		Market participants can hedge their exposure to rising prices by buying 
		enough carbon permits when the price is low to cover their future 
		emissions output.
 If they have a surplus, they can sell them back to the market and make a 
		profit when the price rises. If they don't have enough, they would have 
		to buy more at a higher price.
 
 "Higher carbon prices mean higher costs for all European utilities, 
		unless of course they hedged or stockpiled allowances," said French 
		energy consultant Hibault Laconde.
 
 One such company is coal-heavy German generator RWE <RWEG.DE>, which 
		said it had protected itself against power price volatility by selling 
		fuels, as opposed to selling power production, and simultaneously buying 
		enough emissions permits.
 
 "Our CO2 position is already financially hedged until the end of 2022 
		and we have also taken steps beyond 2022," chief financial officer 
		Markus Krebber said during recent half-year earnings calls with 
		analysts.
 
 COAL
 
 Coal plants have benefited for years from low carbon prices which kept 
		operational costs down.
 
 Many old German coal plants could be operated at low overheads and they 
		were the price setters in the wholesale market for thermal generation.
 
 RWE's hedging strategy involves nuclear and brown coal-generated power 
		being sold usually up to three years in advance and hard coal and 
		gas-fired ones closer to production.
 
 Rival Uniper <UN01.DE> said it sold the bulk of its hydroelectric output 
		next year. The rise in carbon prices will force inefficient coal plants 
		out of the market, chief financial officer Christopher Delbrueck said 
		this week.
 
		 
		Berlin-based Aurora Energy Research said German producers of coal from 
		locally-mined lignite, a heavily polluting brown coal, such as Leag, EPH 
		and RWE, had reason to worry.
 The carbon price rise to 21 euros from 6 euros a year ago could have 
		produced additional costs of 2.3 billion euros, according to Aurora 
		analyst Hanns Koenig.
 
 In coal-reliant Poland, the country's four major state producers are 
		historically heavily exposed to coal generation.
 
 Tauron's chief executive has called the EU carbon price a 
		quasi-ecological tax.
 
 
		
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			The sun rises behind the Uniper coal power plant in Hanau, Germany, 
			early morning November 23, 2016. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach/File Photo 
             
"This is not a comfortable situation for us. Because of the CO2 policy, energy 
could become a luxury good," he was quoted as saying by state news agency PAP at 
the weekend. 
POWER PRICE GAINS
 For companies producing electricity from low-carbon nuclear and hydroelectric 
plants, higher carbon prices are welcomed.
 
 The wholesale price of power reflects the cost of buying carbon permits and 
fuels. Coal and gas prices have risen this year due to Chinese demand, a cold 
winter and a heatwave across Europe. The benchmark German power price is at a 
six-and-a-half year high.
 
 France's EDF <EDF.PA>, which has a generation fleet made up of 77 percent 
nuclear and 10 percent renewables, should produce more competitive electricity 
in interconnected European markets.
 
 "The higher CO2 prices are a huge jackpot for EDF as they drive up wholesale 
power market prices ... This is the case for all nuclear and hydro power 
producers," said Nicolas Goldberg, energy specialist at Columbus Consulting.
 
 A spokesman for Swedish utility Vattenfall said price rises supported its 
strategy of becoming less reliant on fossil fuels.
 
 "If current price developments continue, we expect a gradual decrease in 
profitability of coal-fired assets. However, our diversified portfolio with a 
significant (combined heat and power) share is rather robust to such 
developments," he added.
 
 Germany's Uniper, which has inherited the thermal and hydro plants of former 
parent E.ON <EONGn.DE>, said it had factored in significant price increases for 
carbon, coal and gas-fired power in the coming years.
 
 "That will give our earnings a boost from 2020/21," CFO Delbrueck said.
 
 
Germany's E.ON is focusing on low-carbon power, grids and retail activities, and 
is left with nuclear power production only in Germany and Sweden, where it also 
operates hydropower.
 Czech nuclear, coal and renewable generator CEZ <CEZP.PR> has sold over 77 
percent of its expected 2019 output, benefiting from a higher share of nuclear 
than pure coal generators.
 
 Some analysts say a carbon price around 20-30 euros could encourage more 
utilities to switch to lower carbon fuels.
 
 Gas-fired power generation becomes more competitive at a carbon price of round 
20 euros a ton.
 
 However, margins for gas-fired plants are still mostly negative, despite a 
cleaner carbon record, as high oil and gas prices mean high purchasing costs for 
generators vis-à-vis coal.
 
 Uniper's Delbrueck said it should be closer to 30 euros to get a stronger fuel 
switch.
 
 ($1 = 0.8551 euros)
 
 (Additional reporting by Geert de Clercq in Paris, Lefteris Karagiannopoulos in 
Oslo, Susanna Twidale in London, Stephen Jewkes in Milan, Agnieszka Barteczko in 
Warsaw, Jason Hovet in Prague, Igor Ilic in Zagreb, Bart Meijer in Amsterdam, 
editing by Nina Chestney and David Evans)
 
				 
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