France To Slap Power Suppliers on Wrist For Doing Too Much

France is discovering the hard way that having too much of a good thing—say, electricity—isn’t always cause for celebration. The country’s grid operator, RTE, has issued a sharp-tongued warning to power suppliers and traders who’ve been flouting basic rules and fanning an already toasty power glut. In a letter dated April 11, RTE called out near-daily breaches that are throwing the country’s energy balance into chaos and triggering pricey emergency measures.

Why the drama? Picture a grid groaning under a tidal wave of renewables, nuclear, and imports, while domestic demand lounges around like a cat in the sun. With solar and wind output surging, and incentives for producers to cut generation when prices dip below zero, the market has become erratic.

‘;
document.write(write_html);
}

France, you’ll recall, returned to its throne as Europe’s top power exporter last year thanks to its nuclear fleet roaring back online. But being the continent’s electric sugar daddy has come with side effects—namely, grid stress, export curbs, and price spreads that are now doing yoga stretches across borders.

In this latest scolding, RTE reminded players that they are legally required to submit accurate next-day production forecasts and balance supply with customer demand. Seems basic. But when they don’t, RTE is forced to step in with costly patches—halting output, begging neighboring grids for help, or curtailing consumption like it’s 1979 again.

No names were named, but RTE made it clear: if you break the rules, you’ll foot the bill.

In July, France, which gets 70% of its electricity from nuclear energy, rolled out a plan to limit power export to neighboring countries. In September, power prices in France turned negative as demand sagged with an increase in renewable power, highlighting the challenges of managing an energy grid that is even partially reliant on intermittent sources.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Syria Still Leans on Russia for Oil Supply

    Russia remains Syria’s top oil supplier and has even boosted its sales so far this year despite the fact that the Middle Eastern country emerged from a 14-year-long civil war…

    Exxon Beats Q1 Earnings on Oil Price Surge Despite 6% Production Drop

    Higher oil prices drove the first-quarter adjusted earnings at ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) above the analyst estimates as the jump in prices more than offset lower oil and gas production in…

    Have You Seen?

    Trump ‘Not Happy’ With Iran, Touts Strait ‘100% Shut’

    • May 1, 2026
    Trump ‘Not Happy’ With Iran, Touts Strait ‘100% Shut’

    US Drillers Add Oil and Gas Rigs for Second Week in a Row, Says Baker Hughes

    • May 1, 2026
    US Drillers Add Oil and Gas Rigs for Second Week in a Row, Says Baker Hughes

    Owners of WildFire Energy Explore $4 Billion-Plus Sale of US Shale Operator, Sources Say

    • May 1, 2026
    Owners of WildFire Energy Explore $4 Billion-Plus Sale of US Shale Operator, Sources Say

    US LNG Exports to Asia Surged in April as Middle East Conflict Curtailed Supply

    • May 1, 2026
    US LNG Exports to Asia Surged in April as Middle East Conflict Curtailed Supply

    Syria Still Leans on Russia for Oil Supply

    • May 1, 2026
    Syria Still Leans on Russia for Oil Supply

    Trump’s Trade Czar Says U.S. Looking to Work with Canada on Energy and Critical Minerals

    • May 1, 2026
    Trump’s Trade Czar Says U.S. Looking to Work with Canada on Energy and Critical Minerals

    Exxon Net Income Falls, Output Hit by Iran War

    • May 1, 2026
    Exxon Net Income Falls, Output Hit by Iran War

    Chevron’s Upstream Strength Lifts First-Quarter Earnings Past Estimate

    • May 1, 2026
    Chevron’s Upstream Strength Lifts First-Quarter Earnings Past Estimate

    Iran Threatens Painful Response if US Renews Attacks

    • May 1, 2026
    Iran Threatens Painful Response if US Renews Attacks

    While Asia and Europe Scramble for Natural Gas, the US Glut Has Nowhere to Go

    • May 1, 2026
    While Asia and Europe Scramble for Natural Gas, the US Glut Has Nowhere to Go