Nodal Exchange today announced new records in power and environmental futures. In power, Nodal set a calendar month record for May with traded power futures volume of 234 million MWh, up from 220 million MWh in May 2022. Nodal continues to be the market leader in North American power futures with 52.6% share of open interest at the end of May with 1.286 billion MWh open interest representing $111 Billion of notional value based on both sides.
For the month, environmental markets on Nodal posted record open interest of 274,666 lots and closed the month at 263,917 lots, up 33% from 199,059 lots a year earlier. Broken down further, the renewable energy certificate group posted record open interest of 241,451 lots, and closed the month at 230,667 contracts, up 37% from 168,975 lots a year earlier.
Among the REC contracts, several hit monthly volume and/or open interest records:
- New Jersey Class II RECs open interest climbed to 30,820 lots
- Massachusetts CES-E open interest reached 22,823 lots
- Pennsylvania Solar AECs open interest hit 23,658 lots
- Pennsylvania AEC Tier 2 posted record volume of 6,350 lots and open interest of 22,690 lots
- NAR (North American Registry) wind and solar CRS RECs posted record volume of 1,910 lots, and record open interest of 3,110 lots
- Texas CRS Solar (front half and back half) RECs hit a record 2,674 lots and open interest of 6,058 lots
Nodal, in collaboration with IncubEx, offers the largest suite of environmental contracts in the world and listed three new first-of-their-kind contracts on May 26th:
- Virginia Compliance Renewable Energy Certificate (REC) Futures;
- PJM Quad-Qualified Renewable Energy Certificate (REC) Futures; and
- California Carbon Offset Zero (CCO-0) with Direct Environmental Benefits (DEBS) Futures, which traded on day one.
“I am extremely pleased to see continued strong growth performance in our power and environmental markets,” said Paul Cusenza, Chairman and CEO of Nodal Exchange and Nodal Clear. “We are proud to serve these markets and appreciate the ongoing support of this community.”