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European Union

EU wholesale electricity markets: legal framework, market timeframes, cross-border capacity allocation, pricing, and 2024 reforms on PPAs, two-way CfDs and crisis peak-shaving

Published by a LexisNexis EU Law expert
Practice notes
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Structure of the EU electricity system

The rules that govern the EU electricity system extend to two areas:

  • the physical infrastructure for electricity generation, transmission and consumption (often called the electricity network or grid), and
  • electricity markets (ie the movement of money)

Under the Electricity Directive (Directive (EU) 2019/944), “electricity markets” means markets for electricity, embracing over-the-counter trading and organised exchanges, and markets for energy, capacity, balancing and ancillary services across all time horizons, notably forward, day-ahead and intraday markets.

The EU electricity market is split into:

  • wholesale or production markets, covering power flows and the associated transactions between generators and retailers, and
  • retail markets, which provide electricity to final consumers

Power produced at a power station is commonly bought and resold multiple times within the wholesale space—often via a power or energy exchange—before it reaches the end consumer. Natural gas is traded in a comparable way. At present, several hundred companies take part in wholesale electricity and gas trading across Europe, and more than 10,000 transactions occur every day. This Practice Note offers an outline of how electricity wholesale operates...

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Web page updated on 21/05/2026

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