Germany's Federal Network Agency awarded contracts to 270 bids for the installation of 2,499 megawatts of wind, solar and storage capacity in a May tender, it said late last week.
The tender was significantly oversubscribed with a total of 628 bids received with a capacity of 6,409 MW.
Values were set at between 0.0444 euro cents ($0.051) per kilowatt-hour to 0.0519 euro cents, making for a volume-weighted reduction compared with the previous tender to 0.0506 euro cents per kilowatt hour, versus 0.0554 euro cents, the agency said.
The average award price is now more than 2 euro cents lower per KWh than a tender in Aug. 2024, reflecting a steady downward trend over multiple tenders in that period.
Most awards were made for sites in Lower Saxony, with a total of 70 made for the provision of 628 MW of capacity. That was followed by Brandenburg were 47 awards were made to provide 468 MW. In North Rhine-Westphalia, 353 MW were awarded to 31 bidders.
The agency awarded contracts for 482 MW of solar and energy storage systems to 27 bidders under its 'innovation' tender. The winning bids ranged in price from 0.0475 euro cents per KWh to 0.0561 euro cents per KWh, the statement said.
More than half of these awards were for projects in Bavaria, with 287 MW to be built via 15 contracts offered.
The next tender, for onshore wind turbines, will take place on Aug. 1, the agency said.