Market coupling on two interconnectors between
Denmark and Germany first started in 2008 and was stopped after ten days as it became clear that the algorithms used by EMCC and the PXs were not perfectly aligned. Danish-German market coupling was relaunched successfully in November 2009 with a revised convex optimiser as algorithm.
Baltic Cable between Sweden and Germany was integrated in May 2010. In January 2010, EMCC was asked by TSOs and PXs in the Central Western European (CWE) and Nordic region to develop a system to integrate CWE price coupling and Nordic market splitting. The new scheme is called Interim Tight Volume Coupling (ITVC). It is based on the existing Nordic-German tight volume coupling and is a further enhancement. On 9 November 2010, day-ahead market coupling for the extended region was launched. This region covers
Belgium,
France,
Luxembourg,
Germany, the
Netherlands, the Nordic region and
Estonia. It represents the world's largest single power market of 1,816
TWh, about 60% of European power consumption. The second step adding the
NorNed cable between Norway and the Netherlands started on 12 January 2011. The TSOs between Finland and Spain are preparing to operate a common electricity market in November 2013, and in May 2014 Spain and Portugal were included.
Italy was added in February 2015. == See also ==