Yeah, 2022 was absolutely not an outlier in electricity production in Europe...
> the imports and exports in the link are priced in USD, so if your thesis is true, then it would mean even bigger _volumes_ of electric exports.
That is, indeed, true. Germany's export prices are noticeably lower than Germany's import prices for electricity [1].
That means Germany exports _a lot_ of cheap electricity when electricity is abundant, and requires some expensive electricity when it is not. From the pov of reliability of supply, it's not great. From the PoV of market participants, however, that's pretty good, of course.
Yeah, 2022 was absolutely not an outlier in electricity production in Europe...
> the imports and exports in the link are priced in USD, so if your thesis is true, then it would mean even bigger _volumes_ of electric exports.
That is, indeed, true. Germany's export prices are noticeably lower than Germany's import prices for electricity [1].
That means Germany exports _a lot_ of cheap electricity when electricity is abundant, and requires some expensive electricity when it is not. From the pov of reliability of supply, it's not great. From the PoV of market participants, however, that's pretty good, of course.
[1]: average export/import price, fig. 4 - https://www.ffe.de/en/publications/electricity-imports-to-ge...