Changeflow GovPing Energy EU Energy Market Integration Report
Routine Guidance Added Final

EU Energy Market Integration Report

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Published March 16th, 2026
Detected March 16th, 2026
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Summary

ACER has released its 2026 Monitoring Report on EU energy market integration, highlighting progress in the clean energy transition and persistent challenges. The report details findings on wholesale and household prices, renewable energy growth, price volatility, and gas market stability.

What changed

The European Union Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators (ACER) has published its 2026 Monitoring Report, detailing key developments in EU gas and electricity markets during 2025. The report indicates solid progress in the clean energy transition, with renewables now providing 50% of EU electricity generation, driven by significant solar investments. However, it also identifies persistent challenges such as price volatility, system flexibility issues, and supply risks, noting that EU energy prices remain structurally higher than in the US, and household prices are high despite falling wholesale costs. The report highlights increased electricity price volatility and a greater reliance on gas for evening flexibility, alongside a significant reduction in Russian gas imports offset by increased LNG.

The report recommends ACER's member states enhance energy market integration to bolster global competitiveness and decarbonisation efforts. Key recommendations include improving price efficiency and transparency across all components, harnessing flexibility through demand response and storage, and strengthening market integration via interconnections. Regulated entities, particularly energy companies, should review these findings to understand market trends, potential risks, and strategic directions for navigating the energy transition.

What to do next

  1. Review ACER's 2026 Monitoring Report for insights into EU energy market trends and challenges.
  2. Assess current energy pricing structures for efficiency and transparency, considering network charges and taxation.
  3. Evaluate opportunities to enhance flexibility through demand response, electric vehicles, and battery storage.

Source document (simplified)


16.3.2026

Expanding EU energy market integration is key for global competitiveness and decarbonisation

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Expanding EU energy market integration is key for global competitiveness and decarbonisation

What is it about?

ACER kicks off its 2026 Monitoring Report series with key insights into the EU energy markets, highlighting major developments in 2025 and examining the interplay between gas and electricity markets in the energy transition.

What are the key findings?

The report shows solid progress in Europe’s clean energy transition. It also underlines persistent structural challenges (such as price volatility, system flexibility and supply risks) and how to address them.

  • Wholesale energy prices continued to decline, but global competitiveness remains a challenge, with both gas and electricity prices structurally higher than in the US.
  • Household gas and electricity prices remain high despite falling wholesale prices.
  • Renewables lead the power mix, providing 50% of total EU electricity generation. Solar drives the energy transition, with investments in solar generation rising by 41 TWh compared to 2024.
  • Electricity price volatility increased: Daily wholesale power price swings were around five times higher than in 2020, highlighting the growing need for flexibility.
  • Gas provides evening flexibility: As solar generation drops in the evening, gas-fired power plants are increasingly used to meet demand, pushing wholesale prices upward.
  • Extreme weather drives price spikes: A heatwave on 1 July 2025 reduced cooling efficiency at thermal and nuclear plants, pushing power prices in Poland to around 470 EUR/MWh.
  • Regional price differences highlight the value of interconnections: Different generation mixes and system flexibility across countries offer opportunities when systems are well interconnected.
  • Gas markets remained stable, with hub spreads generally below 2 EUR/MWh.
  • EU slashed its reliance on Russian gas, replacing it with global LNG: Russian pipeline imports to the EU fell by about 162 TWh compared to 2024 and were fully offset by record-high LNG imports.
  • Low year-end gas storage: Heavy winter withdrawals left storage levels 10% below 2024.

What are ACER’s recommendations?

To support global competitiveness and decarbonisation, Europe should step up efforts to expand energy market integration:

  • Make energy prices more efficient and transparent: Ensure efficiency across all price components (energy and supply, network charges and taxation) to improve household affordability and industrial competitiveness.
  • Harness flexibility: Expand demand response, electric vehicles (EVs) and battery use to balance supply and demand, reduce price swings and strengthen grid resilience.
  • Strengthen market integration: Expand interconnections to support cross-border use of renewables, reduce fossil fuel dependence and improve system flexibility and security.
  • Diversify gas supply: Higher LNG supplies replaced Russian pipeline gas but increased reliance on US LNG imports. Greater supply diversification, including domestic decarbonised gases, would reduce vulnerability and mitigate the impact of global price volatility.
  • Reduce reliance on conventional gas: With gas consumption still well above 2030 targets, further action is needed to cut demand and accelerate the uptake of renewable gases.

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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
ACER
Published
March 16th, 2026
Instrument
Guidance
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Energy companies
Geographic scope
EU-wide

Taxonomy

Primary area
Energy
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Decarbonisation Market Competitiveness Renewable Energy

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