![]() ![]() Spain will stop using the vaccine for two weeks, the country’s Health Minister Carolina Darias announced in a nationally televised news conference Monday. If you want to learn how to become a client, email more information.Spain, Germany, France and Italy have become the latest European countries to temporarily halt the rollout of the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine over a small number of blood clot concerns, going against the advice of international medical agencies as a third wave of infections looms over the continent. The deliverable will be updated on a weekly and ad hoc basis as the situation evolves.Ĭomplete the form on this page to download the key findings and report brochure to understand how the coronavirus is impacting:Īlready a P&R client? Access the report here. This report provides updates from the Wood Mackenzie Power & Renewables and Energy Transition teams on the rapidly evolving coronavirus impacts on the wind, solar, storage, and electric vehicle supply chains and development activities, as well as regional power markets. The coronavirus impact on global power markets is changing by the dayĪs a result, Wood Mackenzie has developed a new weekly series to help its power and renewables (P&R) research clients. We’re currently monitoring the impact on all major European power markets, with a particular focus on the following risks:ĭemand in Spain this weekend (14-15 March) was down 5.6% on a week previous, although the week overall was broadly in line with the previous year.įrench demand saw a -9.7% dip from a week earlier, Germany was in fact up by 1.5%, GB down 4.7% – the notable temperature sensitivity of French power demand will have been a factor (last week being warmer than the week before). With supply swings from variable renewable generation during the relatively productive spring period, gas will be a key provider of flexibility to bring over-supplied power markets back into balance – weaker power demand will exacerbate this role. Low gas prices have positioned CCGTs well ahead of many of their coal-fired competitors, meaning that – despite carbon prices falling in a nervous market over the past week – coal’s contribution to power supply is already much reduced in Europe. Industrial and commercial demand is set to be particularly weak as economic activity slows.Įuropean gas generators will bear the brunt of demand loss. Further demand reductions are expected across Europe as lockdowns become more widespread. Italy’s experience provides a guide to how similar restrictions might impact neighbouring countries in the coming days. ![]() What does this mean for other markets now facing lockdown? Forward prices quoted last week for April delivery were down 6% on contracts struck in February. ![]() Net imports – Italy is Europe’s largest power importer – also responded with a -6.1% drop between weeks – the starkest change occurred on Sunday with flows down 45% on the previous week. Non-dispatchable renewables also saw big week-on-week swings, with wind generation down 46% (-280 GWh) and solar up 24% (71 GWh) – highlighting that supply changes were being driven by renewable resource availability as well as lower demand. Power generation was -8.8% on the week before with gas-fired production (accounting for >40% of overall supply in the market) seeing a 5% reduction (-96 GWh). Overnight loads, between 01:00 and 06:00 last Sunday (16 March 2020) were at their lowest for March since the 2016 Easter weekend. That was a 7.3% drop compared to the same week in 2019 (Week 11). In the first week of nation-wide quarantine, power demand fell by 8%. This emergency stop on the economy has led to a sudden and significant drop in power demand. How is this shift in consumer behaviour affecting power demand? And police are fining people for being outside without good reason. Only one member of a household can leave the house at a time. Only supermarkets and pharmacies remain open, some serving customers through windows. More than 60 million people were ordered to stay home. On March 13, in an attempt to slow the rate of infection and reduce the strain on health services, the Italian government implemented a country-wide lockdown. Italy is currently the epicentre of the coronavirus pandemic, with more new and active cases than China – other European countries, Spain and Germany in particular, are not far behind. ![]()
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