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Nord Pool

Nord Pool is the Nordic and Baltic electricity exchange operator and Estonia's designated Nominated Electricity Market Operator (NEMO) under CACM Regulation (EU) 2015/1222. It runs the EE bidding-zone day-ahead and intraday auctions and publishes the hourly clearing prices that anchor most Estonian retail tariffs and PPAs.

Nord Pool is the Nordic and Baltic electricity exchange and Estonia's designated Nominated Electricity Market Operator (NEMO) under CACM Regulation (EU) 2015/1222. It runs the EE bidding-zone day-ahead and intraday auctions and publishes the hourly clearing prices that anchor most Estonian retail tariffs and PPAs.

History and ownership

Nord Pool started in 1993 as Statnett Marked AS (Norway only) and became Nord Pool ASA in 1996 when Sweden joined — the first multinational electricity exchange in the world. Estonia joined as a bidding zone in 2010, Lithuania in 2012, Latvia in 2013. Today Nord Pool AS is owned by Euronext (66%) and TSO Holding (34%); TSO Holding represents the Nordic and Baltic TSOs. EPEX SPOT is also a designated NEMO for Estonia but Nord Pool remains the operational day-ahead and intraday exchange in practice.

Products

Three core products: day-ahead (Elspot — hourly auction closing at 12:00 CET), intraday (Elbas / SIDC — continuous trading until close to delivery), and various financial forwards (EPAD bidding-zone differentials, system reference contracts). The Estonian retail spot tariff is computed directly from Nord Pool day-ahead clearing prices.

Bidding zones and price spread

Estonia is a single bidding zone (EE). Cross-border capacity to FI, LV and SE4 is allocated through implicit auction in the day-ahead clearing. When constraints bind, EE prices diverge from neighbours — sometimes by hundreds of euros per MWh in extreme hours. This spread is what makes BESS arbitrage profitable and is a core driver of Estonian retail price volatility.

Dažniausiai užduodami klausimai

What is Nord Pool?
Nord Pool is the dominant Nordic-Baltic electricity exchange. Founded as the world's first multinational power exchange in 1996 (initially Norway-Sweden), it now operates day-ahead and intraday markets across the Nordics, Baltics, UK, Ireland and continental Europe. In Estonia, Nord Pool is the designated Nominated Electricity Market Operator (NEMO) under CACM Regulation (EU) 2015/1222.
What does Nord Pool do in Estonia?
Three things. (1) Runs the day-ahead auction for the EE bidding zone — bids in by noon, prices published around 13:00. (2) Runs the intraday continuous order book — opens after day-ahead gate closure, closes 30–60 minutes pre-delivery. (3) Publishes the hourly (now 15-minute) EE area price. The Estonian price feeds Volton, public dashboards and most retail-tariff indexation.
What's the difference between Nord Pool and EPEX SPOT?
Both hold NEMO designation in Estonia under CACM, but only Nord Pool runs active trading on the EE zone. EPEX SPOT is dominant in continental Europe (DE, FR, UK and others). Both are connected to SDAC, so a buy order in EE on Nord Pool can match against a sell order in DE on EPEX SPOT through the Euphemia algorithm, even though the two NEMOs are different commercial entities.
Where does Nord Pool publish prices?
Public day-ahead prices are at nordpoolgroup.com (free, slightly delayed) and via API for paying customers. The Volton public-data platform republishes the EE area day-ahead and imbalance prices under CC-BY-4.0 with attribution to Nord Pool / Elering. ENTSO-E Transparency Platform also republishes day-ahead prices under EU transparency obligations.

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