Statkraft reports stronger Q1 earnings amid higher power prices

Statkraft reports stronger Q1 earnings amid higher power prices
Rivanshi Rakhrai
07 May 2026, 15:20 PM

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Statkraft (Statkraft ASA)

Buy Statkraft. Q1 earnings beat is directly tied to higher Nordic power prices (90.5 vs 46.0 EUR/MWh) from colder weather, weaker wind, and tight hydrology—exactly the conditions that lift hydro-heavy utilities and trading desks. Statkraft also has meaningful Markets contributions, so price volatility should keep supporting earnings rather than just generation volume.

Key Risk: A fast weather normalization that refills reservoirs and restores wind, collapsing Nordic power prices and trading margins.

Nordic power price exposure (EEX/ICE power futures)

Buy Nordic power futures/ETFs tied to the Nordic benchmark (e.g., EEX Nordic power contracts). The news points to a supply-demand squeeze (low hydrological reserves + dry outlook + low wind) and ongoing volatility from geopolitics. That combination typically keeps forward curves elevated and supports near-to-mid term price risk premia.

Key Risk: Forward curves roll down because hydrology improves and demand weakens, making current tightness a short-lived spike.

  • Statkraft’s Q1 operating profit rose on higher Nordic power prices.
  • Cold weather and weak wind output pushed electricity prices higher.
  • Low reservoir levels added pressure on Nordic energy markets.

Norway’s largest utility, Statkraft, reported a rise in underlying operating profit for the first quarter on Thursday, supported by higher electricity prices across the Nordic region.

The state-owned energy company said underlying profit before interest and tax climbed to 11.6 billion Norwegian crowns ($1.25 billion) during the quarter, compared with 9.0 billion crowns in the same period last year.

Higher power prices support earnings

According to the company, stronger power prices across Norwegian price areas and increased contributions from its Markets division helped boost quarterly earnings.

“Higher power prices across all Norwegian price areas, combined with increased contributions from Markets, drove the results,” Chief Executive Officer Birgitte Ringstad Vartdal said in a statement.

The Nordic benchmark power price averaged 90.5 euros per megawatt hour (MWh) during the first quarter, almost double the 46.0 euros/MWh recorded a year earlier.

Statkraft said the sharp increase in electricity prices was mainly driven by colder weather conditions, weaker wind power generation, and concerns over dry weather forecasts.

Weather conditions tighten power supply

The company noted that reduced wind generation and lower hydrological reserves created tighter supply conditions in the Nordic energy market during the quarter.

“The results were impacted by significant volatility in the European and Nordic energy markets, driven by geopolitical uncertainty and a continuing weak hydrological balance affecting power generation in Norway,” Vartdal said.

Statkraft added that low reservoir and snow levels further contributed to higher market prices during the period.

The utility said a dry outlook, combined with lower water reserves and reduced snowfall, weakened the hydrological balance in Norway, affecting hydroelectric power generation.

Market volatility remains elevated

The company highlighted continued volatility across European and Nordic energy markets during the quarter, with geopolitical uncertainty adding pressure to electricity pricing dynamics.

Statkraft said market conditions remained challenging as fluctuations in renewable power output and weather patterns continued to influence regional supply and demand balances.

Hydropower producers across the Nordic region are closely monitoring reservoir levels and weather developments, as these factors remain critical in determining electricity generation capacity and pricing trends.

Statkraft expands renewable energy footprint globally

Statkraft is Europe’s largest renewable energy producer and a major international provider of hydropower, wind, and solar energy.

Founded in 1895 and headquartered in Oslo, the Norwegian state-owned utility operates more than 360 power plants across Europe, Asia, and South America.

Around 96% of the company’s total power production comes from renewable energy sources.

The company is the largest hydropower operator in Europe, managing major reservoirs in Norway, Sweden, and Germany.

Statkraft also develops and operates onshore wind farms in several European countries, including projects such as the Fosen Vind development in Norway, alongside operations in Germany and France.

In solar energy, the company has expanded its presence through solar park developments in countries including the Netherlands and India.

Besides renewable generation, Statkraft is also a major participant in energy trading and market operations, supplying electricity to industrial customers, buying and selling energy, and providing grid balancing services.

The company has additionally focused on repowering older renewable assets by replacing ageing wind turbines with more efficient technology, including projects such as the Montes de Cierzo wind repowering initiative in Spain.

The rise in Nordic benchmark prices during the quarter reflected tighter overall market conditions, particularly as cold weather increased electricity demand while lower wind generation reduced available supply.

Despite the challenging environment, Statkraft reported improved quarterly earnings, supported by stronger pricing and higher contributions from trading operations.