Flexibility as the new currency
In today’s energy markets, value is no longer defined primarily by volume or capacity. It is defined by flexibility. The […]
In today’s energy markets, value is no longer defined primarily by volume or capacity. It is defined by flexibility. The […]
In integrated energy markets, infrastructure no longer operates silently in the background. It has become an active source of information,
Oil markets shape South-East Europe less through headline prices and more through the direction, reliability, and cost of physical flows.
Energy markets are often portrayed as arenas where prices are discovered on exchanges, driven by transparent bids and offers. In
Oil rarely features in discussions about electricity market stability. It is often treated as a parallel energy universe, relevant to
In a system where natural gas serves as the primary source of flexibility, balancing the gas network is no longer
In theory, the spark spread is a straightforward concept. It represents the margin between the price of electricity and the
In Europe’s current energy architecture, natural gas occupies a paradoxical position. It is indispensable to system stability, yet it is
For much of Europe’s modern energy history, stability was assessed locally. If electricity prices were calm, the power system was
Energy markets are often described as short-memory systems. Prices spike, conditions normalise, and attention moves on. This perception is increasingly
Volatility used to be treated as a market-specific phenomenon. Electricity was volatile because demand had to be balanced in real
In an integrated energy system, shocks no longer respect sectoral boundaries. What begins as a local disruption, a technical failure,