The Enwex Germany Solar (GSM) contract, which starts on April 23, brings exchange-approved solar radiation hedging to a market that has largely operated over-the-counter (OTC) until now. A development that, according to Munich Re’s weather derivatives team, could broaden participation and formalize risk management.
The world’s first exchange-endorsed solar futures contract will launch on the Abaxx Exchange on April 23, as solar power generation increasingly influences spot prices and revenues in European energy markets.
The Enwex Germany Solar (GSM) contract was developed by German energy exchange Enwex and will be listed on the Singapore-based Abaxx Exchange. It allows market participants to hedge against variability in solar radiation in Germany by using a standardized, exchange-approved instrument for the first time.
Pierre Buisson, senior structurer and weather derivatives expert at Munich Re, said the launch is a meaningful step.
“European energy markets have undergone a structural shift as installed solar capacity has reached a scale where radiation risk has a measurable impact on prices and revenues,” Buisson said. pv magazine. “Weather derivatives have traditionally focused on temperature, wind and precipitation, but solar radiation has now clearly emerged as a core risk factor.”
Buisson said most solar hedging to date has been done over the counter by participants who were already familiar with weather risk tools.
“An exchange-cleared contract helps institutionalize this market: it lowers barriers to entry, brings new counterparties into the space and allows standard risks to be moved to transparent locations – while more complex profiles remain OTC,” he said.
He added that sustainable liquidity would depend on the credibility of the index, contract design and alignment with real hedging needs.
“The demand is there, risk bearers are willing to participate and the impact of solar energy on energy prices is widely understood,” Buisson said. “The next step is scale.”
Joe Raia, Chief Commercial Officer of Abaxx Exchange, said the contract addresses a risk management gap for solar owners and energy traders. The Germany-specific index reflects the market where solar energy risk most directly determines price formation, said Robin Girmes, CEO of Enwex. And the product responds to a need for hedging that has increased alongside Germany’s solar expansion, says Max Amir Dieringer, CEO of Citadel FlexPower.
On basis risk, Buisson said solar and wind energy are not fundamentally different in the way they are measured in the world of weather trading, with the key distinction being seasonality. The wind trade is concentrated in the winter months, while the solar risk is most active in the summer, with activity also visible in the shoulder months of spring and autumn. Buisson added that while Germany leads in liquidity, solar hedging activity is also growing in the Netherlands, Spain and Italy.
Abaxx Exchange is headquartered in Singapore and operates as a regulated commodity exchange. Enwex is a German energy exchange. Citadel FlexPower is a platform for energy trading and flexibility.
This content is copyrighted and may not be reused. If you would like to collaborate with us and reuse some of our content, please contact: editors@pv-magazine.com.
