
Energy experts report Brazilian electricity prices have surged dramatically in March 2025, more than tripling from February levels.
The Price of Settlement of Differences jumped from R$90 per megawatt-hour to over R$300/MWh, now averaging R$350/MWh this week.This price explosion stems from a new government-implemented methodology that takes a more pessimistic approach to potential drought scenarios.
The system now assigns greater weight to extreme drought possibilities despite relatively comfortable current reservoir levels.The model now asks you to put on your seatbelt before the crash happens, explains Gustavo Ayala, CEO of Bolt Energy.
It dispatches thermal plants preventively to avoid abrupt changes later.Southeast and Center-West reservoirs remain at nearly 70% capacity.
However, Natural Energy Inflow has deteriorated since mid-February, suggesting an early end to the wet season.The surge affects both regulated and free energy markets.
Hydroelectric energy contracts with April expiration have more than doubled to R$251.64/MWh compared to Januarys R$117.5/MWh.Energy experts report Brazilian electricity prices have surged dramatically in March 2025, more than tripling from February levels.
(Photo Internet reproduction)This situation validates predictions made by Indra Energia CEO Ingrid Santos in February 2024.
Santos anticipated price increases due to poor rainfall patterns affecting hydroelectric generation.Brazils Energy Market Outlook for 2025Experts expect the volatility to continue throughout 2025.
Regulated market consumers face potential yellow tariff flags in May followed by red flags from July through November.The energy price surge contributes to broader economic concerns.
Residential electricity prices rose 16.80% in February, pushing inflation to 1.31%, the highest February rate in 22 years.Brazils annual inflation has reached 5.06%, exceeding the central banks target ceiling.
The bank recently raised its benchmark interest rate to 13.25% and signaled another increase to 14.25% in March.Some analysts forecast prices will remain elevated but with controlled volatility.
Prices will fluctuate between R$100 and R$400, not swing from floor prices to R$1,000 overnight like in 2023, adds Ayala.For consumers, the message remains clear: higher and more volatile energy prices will characterize Brazils market throughout 2025.
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