4 December 2025

Weekly Energy Market Update 

Outlook

Short-term power prices have remained very high on the continent in recent days due to low wind generation, with German baseload for Wednesday for example clearing at €164.81/MWh. Despite this strength, prices for January and beyond have continued to decline, driven by forecasts of much warmer-than-average temperatures and windy conditions across Northwestern Europe from this weekend onward. Hopes that ongoing peace talks could increase Russian energy exports have faded somewhat, and with weather potentially turning more supportive in the coming weeks, we see current price levels as a good opportunity to increase hedging for the coming quarters. The longer-term outlook remains bearish, thanks to expectations of rising global LNG supply, which is likely to leave the gas market oversupplied. 



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General Context

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The UK manufacturing sector recorded its first rise in activity since September 2024 in November, supported by stronger domestic demand and a smaller slowdown in overseas orders, while manufacturing remained weak in the Eurozone and Asia’s largest economies. 

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According to the OECD, Britain’s economy is now expected to grow faster in 2026 than previously forecast. Growth is projected to ease from 1.4% this year to 1.2% next year, a modest upgrade from the 1% forecast made in September, before rising to 1.3% in 2027. 

Oil

 

Prices rose modestly week-on-week as uncertainty from stalled Russia-Ukraine peace talks and ongoing attacks on Russian energy infrastructure lent support. However, lingering concerns over a global oil oversupply, reinforced by rising US inventories, kept gains limited. 

As expected, OPEC+ agreed to keep oil output unchanged in Q1 26, slowing its push to regain market share amid weakening demand, signs of global oversupply, and ongoing uncertainty over Russian sanctions. 

 

 

Oil

Gas & Power

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According to the latest data, French nuclear power output reached a six-year high of 333 TWh between January and November. Nuclear generation has been steadily rising since 2023, following the stress-corrosion issues encountered in 2022. At the same time, hydro, wind, and solar production also increased, enabling higher power exports despite a 1.6% rise in demand. 

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The European Parliament and the Council reached an agreement this week to permanently end imports of Russian gas and to move toward phasing out Russian oil. Under the deal, LNG imports will be phased out by 31 December 2026, and pipeline imports will end by 30 September 2027. Member States may extend the pipeline deadline to 31 October 2027 only if their gas storage levels fall below the required filling thresholds. 

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Great British Energy unveiled a five-year strategic plan to accelerate the UK’s transition to renewable power. The plan targets 15 GW of clean energy generation and storage capacity by 2030, with priorities including community energy projects, onshore energy development, and offshore wind expansion. In parallel, Ofgem has approved a £28 billion energy system upgrade over the next five years to strengthen the safety and reliability of the national grid. 

Current Prices

Market 27/11/25 04/12/25 Change
Brent (February) $62.75

$63.00

^
UK Allowances (December 25) £57.50 £56.50
UK Gas (NBP): January 2026 76.50p
71.25p
UK Gas (NBP): Summer 26 68.50p 65.50p
UK Gas (NBP): Winter 26 76.00p 72.00p
UK Power: January 26 £84.00 £79.75
UK Power: Summer 26 £68.75 £66.75
UK Power: Winter 26 £76.75 £74.25

UK Gas (NBP) - Rolling 12-Month Average

Screenshot 2025-12-04 at 14.25.47

Sustainability Spotlight

 

EU Commission accused of lack of transparency for new urgent cuts to sustainability regulations.

The EU Ombudsman has concluded that the EU Commission process to advance the Omnibus package significantly reducing the CSRD and CSDDD scopes, and introducing CBAM changes, failed to follow its own rules on transparent and evidence-based lawmaking. Prompted by complaints by climate and human rights campaigners, the inquiry found that the Commission failed to justify the urgency of the measures which will shape the future of EU corporate sustainability reporting.

With a sub-24-hour internal consultation conducted across a weekend, and no public consultation prior to proposing regulation cuts,  the EU Ombudswoman, Teresa Anjinho, stated that all the "shortcomings amounted to maladministration".

 

 

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Talk to our experts

 

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