All terms
Reserves

FCR (Frequency Containment Reserve)

The fastest balancing product on the grid — fully activated within 30 seconds of a frequency deviation, automatic, no TSO command. Every FCR-providing asset carries a local frequency sensor and adjusts output continuously based on what it measures.

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FCR: what catches the grid when a reactor trips
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Frequency Containment Reserve (FCR) is the fastest tier of operating reserves on the European grid. It activates within 30 seconds of any frequency deviation, fully automatically, with no command from the Transmission System Operator. Every asset that provides FCR carries a local frequency sensor and adjusts its output continuously based on what it measures.

Symmetric and physics-based

The product is symmetric: when frequency falls below 50 Hz, FCR generators ramp up and FCR loads ramp down; above 50 Hz the opposite. Because activation is local and physics-based, FCR is the layer that prevents cascading frequency collapse when a large generator trips offline.

Three market geometries in Europe

The Continental synchronous area runs a single unified FCR product, procured via daily auctions through the EU FCR Cooperation platform (Germany, France, Netherlands, Switzerland, Austria and others). The Nordic synchronous area splits FCR into FCR-N (normal operation, ±100 mHz around 50 Hz) and FCR-D (disturbances, beyond ±100 mHz). The Baltic states disconnected from the Russian IPS/UPS grid on 8 February 2025 and synchronised with the Continental European grid on 9 February 2025; they procure FCR through a separate Baltic balancing-capacity market run jointly by Elering, AST and Litgrid — not the EU FCR Cooperation platform that Germany, the Netherlands and other Continental countries share. Total Baltic FCR demand for 2026 is around 28 MW.

Capacity-based compensation

BSPs are paid for being available, not for the energy they end up delivering, because the activated energy in any single event is tiny. Battery energy storage systems dominate FCR provision in 2026 due to their sub-second response time and zero ramp-rate cost.