Inside Nord Pool
Author
Volton Editorial Team
Date Published
Nord Pool is the Nordic and Baltic electricity exchange — Estonia's designated NEMO under EU CACM regulation. It runs the day-ahead and intraday auctions for the EE bidding zone, and the hourly clearing prices it publishes anchor most Estonian retail tariffs and renewable PPAs.
There is a power exchange that most people outside the energy industry have never heard of. It clears the wholesale electricity market across the Nordics, the Baltics, and much of Western Europe — Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, the UK, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Poland, Romania and a handful of others — and it moves hundreds of terawatt-hours a year. The name is Nord Pool. On a normal day, more money trades through it than through most stock exchanges.
Nord Pool was founded in 1996 by Norway and Sweden as part of an effort to liberalise the regional power market. At the time it was the world’s first multinational power exchange. Today it is owned by Euronext and operates the wholesale day-ahead and intraday markets across most of northern and western Europe.
The day-ahead auction is the centrepiece. Members submit bids and offers for each hour of the next day. At noon CET, Nord Pool’s algorithm matches them and publishes a clearing price for each bidding zone. That number, the day-ahead spot price, is the reference around which the rest of the energy industry organises itself. Long-term contracts get indexed against it. Retail tariffs derive from it. Balancing markets benchmark against it. Government policy debates it.
The auction itself is, in design terms, almost beautiful. Every accepted bid is paid the clearing price, regardless of how high it bid. Every accepted offer is also paid the clearing price, regardless of how low it offered. This is "pay-as-cleared", and it gives every participant exactly the same incentive: bid your true marginal cost. Bidding higher than your cost loses you the trade. Bidding lower than your cost makes you sell at a loss. The honest bid wins.
Layered on top is implicit cross-border allocation. The algorithm does not just match bids inside a single country. It also considers the transmission capacity that the TSOs have made available between zones, and lets cheaper electricity flow across borders to where it is more expensive, until either the price equalises or the cable hits its rated limit. This means the price difference between, say, Estonia and Finland is bounded by the capacity of the Estlink cables: open more cable and prices converge; saturate the cable and prices diverge. A nontrivial amount of European energy policy is downstream of how this plays out in practice.
After the day-ahead market closes, intraday opens. This is a continuous market rather than an auction. Bids and offers post in real time and prices move minute by minute. It exists because forecasts change. A wind farm that expected 50 MW at 14:00 but is now seeing 60 MW can sell the surplus. A retailer whose customers are using less than expected can buy back the excess they bought yesterday. By gate closure (30 minutes before delivery on the Estonia–Finland border, with intra-zonal trading possible closer still), the schedules submitted to the TSO should match what is actually about to happen.
Membership of Nord Pool is not trivial. There are membership fees, trading software requirements, credit checks, and the legal infrastructure of being a Balance Responsible Party at the TSO. Most renewable producers, demand-side actors and smaller battery operators have none of those things, which means they trade through an aggregator who does.
Volton is a member of Nord Pool and a registered Balance Responsible Party in Estonia. Trading on day-ahead and intraday for the assets in our portfolio happens every day: a solar park’s noon production gets bid into day-ahead the day before, the imbalance gets settled with Elering after the fact, and if cloud cover changes the forecast in between, we re-bid in intraday. The asset owner sees one revenue line. Behind it are several hundred trades a day across two market segments.
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