
22 October 2007
British Energy seem to always have bad luck when it comes to maintenance.
Hartlepool and Heysham will continue to be off-line until mid November as BE looks to fit a technical problem with the boilers. It appears that some mis-wiring has been found and needs to be replaced carefully. In reality it appears a small problem as it is related to the boiler as opposed to the reactor. But at a time when NGC have been calling NISM and there is a semi- cold snap in October players could do with this additional supply soon.
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Nuclear Change
 
14 April 2005
British Energy change their board but not the fundamental reason as to why they need to change.  
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Winter 11 - A Slippery Slope
 
06 May 2011
While March was a month of shocks and gains, April seems to have marked the start of a downward trend in the UK power market. The WInter 11 contract is just one example.  
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Japan, Germany & MENA -Global Energy
 
18 March 2011
Bullish gains were seen across the fuels complex as traders and analysts rushed to assess the impact of the devastating earthquake and subsequent Tsunami in Japan as well as Germany's announcement that it was to take 7 nuclear generators offline immediately.  
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Centrica and BE - A Natural Fit?
 
27 August 2008
Invesco – the investment company that owns 15% of British Energy and 5% of Centrica has discussed with the Government the possibility of a merger between the two energy companies.  
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What's in the Mix?
 
24 September 2010
While gains may have been seen in both the power and gas markets this week – the gains were not equal causing a big shift in the generation mix  
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Unseasonal Temperatures help to melt prices
 
16 November 2009
Middle of November but no sign of wintery temperatures. The effect was to soften the prompt power market, which also felt the pressure from weak commodity curves. The downward trend fed through the power curve.  
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What's Happening in the Back-End?
 
19 June 2009
The back end of the curve is extremely difficult to trade. Those dipping their toe in tend to be Producers (with excessive length adjusting their risk positions) and Banks looking for some exposure. At the same time Retailers tend to be short-termist.  
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