By Jan Hromadko 

FRANKFURT--Austria's Verbund AG Wednesday became the latest European utility to close electricity generators that burn clean natural gas because turbines powered by subsidized renewable energies and dirtier coal are less expensive to run.

Verbund said Wednesday it would mothball three state-of-the-art generation units in Austria and France, with a combined output capacity of more than 1.2 gigawatts. The state-owned company blamed "massive distortions in the European electricity market" that have gutted profits at traditional power plants across Europe, particularly ones using gas.

The planned closure follows similar recent moves by giants including Germany's RWE AG and E.ON SE, U.K.-based Centrica PLC and France's GDF Suez SA.

In Germany, Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg, for example, utilities have announced plans to close generators with combined capacity of more than 11 gigawatts between last year and 2018, according to research from Morgan Stanley. That is equivalent to more than 10 large nuclear reactors. Another 20 gigawatts of nuclear, coal and other generating capacity is also being taken offline during the period.

European utilities' retreat from natural gas is an unexpected result of governments' promotion of renewable ecological energy sources, such as wind and solar power. Most European countries heavily subsidize these new energies to protect the environment. The rich subsidies have resulted in a capacity glut, which has eroded wholesale power prices.

Compounding the rise of European renewables is a flood of inexpensive but dirty coal from the U.S., where it is superfluous due to abundant new natural gas supplies.

As a result, benchmark power contracts for delivery in 2015 now trade at around EUR44 per megawatt-hour, according to German energy exchange EEX. That is down roughly 36% from March 2011, just before the nuclear disaster at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi power station prompted an acceleration of Germany's "green" push.

Verbund's plan "is symptomatic of the situation on the power-generation market," said Stephan Wulf, an analyst at Warburg Research in Hamburg. "Gas-fired power plants don't earn any money because of the relatively high fuel cost and the fact renewables are displacing them."

The situation looks even worse for plants now in construction. Germany's main energy-industry lobbying group, BDEW, said last month that four coal-fired plants and three gas- power plants will come online this year. The cutting-edge units, which were planned several years ago under better market conditions, will probably be uneconomical for their operators, said BDEW Managing Director Hildegard Müller.

A spokeswoman for Germany's Economic and Energy Ministry said Tuesday that plant shutdowns show the market is working by eliminating overcapacity. She didn't address the emission levels of mothballed plants compared with those remaining open.

The ministry said that regulators have stopped utilities from closing generators that are vital. For example, the government last year was forced to financially support a new, highly efficient gas plant when its operator, E.ON, threatened to close the unprofitable unit and cut power supplies to the booming Munich area.

The German government has said it may need to subsidize construction of new power plants, although current supply is more than sufficient. Some European countries, like France and the U.K., have already taken steps to support plant construction.

E.ON, which reported a 65% decline in first-quarter net profit Tuesday, urged the German government to "provide appropriate compensation for conventional generation capacity".

Write to Jan Hromadko at jan.hromadko@wsj.com

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