Electric Power, Energy Transition, Renewables

July 14, 2026

How heat waves are rewiring Europe's power markets

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Featuring Eklavya Gupte


HIGHLIGHTS

France shows highest price sensitivity in summer

Europe shifts from winter to dual-peak system

Traditionally, European power systems were engineered around a single imperative: survive the winter "Dunkelflaute," those prolonged cold, dark, windless stretches that push demand higher while renewable generation collapses. But rising summer temperatures are dismantling this assumption. Heat waves are forcing a fundamental recalibration of infrastructure investment, operational strategy and market design across the European power sector.

In this episode, host Eklavya Gupte speaks with Parth Goel, power analyst at S&P Global Energy CERA, about how extreme heat is reshaping demand patterns, straining supply and exposing vulnerabilities in the continent's energy infrastructure.

Goel explains why France, rather than Southern Europe, has emerged as the most price-sensitive region during heat waves, how solar generation drives dramatic price swings between midday troughs and evening peaks, and why Europe is shifting from a winter-peaking power system to a dual-peaking one.

The conversation also examines the compounding effects of drought on Alpine hydro, the thermal stress on nuclear cooling systems, and why summer now demands the same infrastructure planning attention as winter.

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