France Adds First New Nuclear Reactor to Its Grid Since 1999
Saturday France connected a new nuclear reactor to its grid “for the first time in a quarter century…” reports Bloomberg, “adding low-carbon electricity supply at a time when a sputtering economy has made demand sluggish.”
The Flamanville-3 reactor — the first such addition since Civaux 2 was connected in 1999 — will join EDF’s fleet of 56 reactors in France, which generate more than two-thirds of the country’s electricity and are the backbone of western Europe’s power system. When fully ramped up, the new unit will provide a stable source of supply, which can be particularly useful during peak hours in the winter. Increased nuclear output will also curb the use of gas-fired power stations.
France is set for record power exports in 2024 as local demand remains subdued and it keeps adding renewable capacity. Better generation from EDF’s nuclear fleet is also helping keep a lid on wholesale prices, partly reversing bill increases caused by Europe’s energy crisis. The Flamanville-3 reactor in the country’s northwest adds 1.6 gigawatts of output, raising France overall atomic capacity to about 63 gigawatts…
Since construction started in 2007, its budget — excluding finance costs — has quadrupled to an estimated €13.2 billion ($13.9 billion). The yearslong saga has created lasting doubts about the French nuclear industry’s ability to build reactors on time and on schedule — a crucial issue as it prepares to build at least six large plants in the country. EDF’s ongoing work on two similar reactors in the UK has also suffered repeated delays and cost overruns, complicating the British government’s effort to raise funds for the construction of another pair of EPRs.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Saturday France connected a new nuclear reactor to its grid “for the first time in a quarter century…” reports Bloomberg, “adding low-carbon electricity supply at a time when a sputtering economy has made demand sluggish.”
The Flamanville-3 reactor — the first such addition since Civaux 2 was connected in 1999 — will join EDF’s fleet of 56 reactors in France, which generate more than two-thirds of the country’s electricity and are the backbone of western Europe’s power system. When fully ramped up, the new unit will provide a stable source of supply, which can be particularly useful during peak hours in the winter. Increased nuclear output will also curb the use of gas-fired power stations.
France is set for record power exports in 2024 as local demand remains subdued and it keeps adding renewable capacity. Better generation from EDF’s nuclear fleet is also helping keep a lid on wholesale prices, partly reversing bill increases caused by Europe’s energy crisis. The Flamanville-3 reactor in the country’s northwest adds 1.6 gigawatts of output, raising France overall atomic capacity to about 63 gigawatts…
Since construction started in 2007, its budget — excluding finance costs — has quadrupled to an estimated €13.2 billion ($13.9 billion). The yearslong saga has created lasting doubts about the French nuclear industry’s ability to build reactors on time and on schedule — a crucial issue as it prepares to build at least six large plants in the country. EDF’s ongoing work on two similar reactors in the UK has also suffered repeated delays and cost overruns, complicating the British government’s effort to raise funds for the construction of another pair of EPRs.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.