Back to Blog

Extreme snow levels in the Alps – and more to come during Christmas week

Eylert Ellefsen
Archived blog post. This blog post has been transferred from our previous blogging platform. Links and images may not work as intended.

The snow conditions across the Alps are superb before the Christmas week, close to 150% of normal levels. Weather outlooks are wet too so that the hydrological balance will improve further towards New Year’s Eve.

Sign up to try Energy Quantified for free. No payment or credit card required.

In short, we can summarise the hydropower situation for the Alps, including France, Switzerland, Austria and Italy, as follows:

  1. Energy precipitation since 1 November has been at 155% of normal across the Alps, which means about 15 TWh more than normal.
  2. Very high precipitation outlooks for week 51: 7 TWh, or 160 % above the seasonal normal.
  3. Snow/groundwater by the end of week 51 is estimated to be close to 200 % of normal (+18 TWh).
  4. France and Italy are most exposed to the strong hydropower situation, the production level is currently at about 150 % of seasonal normal for these areas.

Growing snow and water reservoirs

The hydropower situation across the Alps was close to a normal by the end of October. Since the 1 November, we have experienced a very vet period, and the accumulated level is about 155 % of normal, or 15 TWh higher than the normal. Italy has had the strongest levels as the dominating weather pattern has come from the southwest, resulting in lots of precipitation in France and the southern parts of the Swiss and Austrian Alps.

For France and Italy, the precipitation during November and so far in December resulted in solid inflow and production levels in addition to the high snow/groundwater levels. For Austria and Switzerland, the inflows have been more moderate, but the snow package has come out much stronger than normal for these countries too.

Looking into the details of the hydropower situation for the different countries in the Alps, we see from the table below the positive numbers for snow/groundwater for all countries, in particular for France and Italy. The overall water reservoir level is slightly higher than the long-term normal, so the hydropower supply situation is satisfactory for the winter season. Expect the production level for the upcoming summer period to be significantly higher than normal due to the huge snow package.

Deviation from normal by the end of week 51 in the Alps.
Hydro balance in France.
Snow and groundwater levels in France.
Water reservoir filling in France.

Inflow and hydro production

If we look to the latest inflow and production conditions in France and Italy, we see from the charts below show the production has been higher than normal since the start of the rainy period first part of November.

Production in Switzerland and Austria has been rather close to normal through this period.

Inflow for France.
Net hydro production for France.

Outlooks for the Christmas week and towards New Year’s Eve

The general outlook towards the Chrismas period and New Year’s Eve is that the Alpine Region will receive lots of precipitation, in particular until Christmas Day. The entire region will see precipitation levels close to 200 % of normal, and the overall snow package will increase by 7-8 TWh more than normal the next 14 days.

Sooner or later, this will further increase hydropower production. It could happen already in Q1-2020 if it turns out to be extremely mild, but the main part will come during the melting period.

In the short-term, we will most likely see rather heavy run-of-river production in France and Italy during the Christmas period. This is due to solid inflow levels, which will put downside pressure on prices during the holidays.

Precipitation for France.

Closing words

The Montel-EQ team provides you with updated hydrological analysis throughout the Christmas period, preparing you for the start of the New Year.

Contact me if you any questions regarding the Alpine hydropower situation at eylert@energyquantified.com.

More from the Blog

French nuclear outages winter 2022/23 and power balance outlook

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

French nuclear production is expected to reach its lowest production level since 1991 this year. This is mainly because of extended technical inspections and a large number of outages, but reduced production during the heat waves this summer has also played a part. By the end of August, we see that 25 out of 56 French nuclear plants are out of operation, resulting in a production output of 26 GWh/h – which is about 10 GWh/h lower than for the same month last year. EDF has announced production targets of 280-300 TWh for 2022, and 300-330 TWh for 2023. Based on these targets, EQ has studied the power balance outlook for 2022/23 and the nuclear production estimates for the winter.

Read Story

Hydropower production in the Alp region at 25 year-low after the summer drought

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

The European Continent has experienced an extraordinarily hot and dry summer. As a result, there has been a lot of focus on reduced nuclear capacity due to higher river temperatures and low flow rates. In this blog post, EQ will focus on the hydropower situation across the Alp region – having hit the lowest production levels in 25 years this summer. For reference, the Alp region includes Germany, France, Switzerland, Austria, and Italy with an accumulated yearly production level of 187 TWh.

Read Story

Norway-South: Hydro Reservoir scenarios towards December – will the supply situation be threatened next spring?

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

There is a strong public focus on the very low hydro reservoir situation in Norway-South as spot prices are surging, and we continue to experience an energy crisis across Europe. How can Norway-South avoid any risk of a supply squeeze?

Read Story

Ready to try Energy Quantified?

No payment or credit card required.
Would you rather like a personal demo? Book a demo