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by Staff Writers Paris (AFP) June 17, 2011 France's Energy Minister Eric Besson is urging the European Commission to tackle the knock-on effects of Germany's decision to abandon nuclear power, fearing energy supplies problems, in a letter seen Friday. "Our national decisions can have a substantial impact on the balance between electricity demand and supply in other European Union nations," Besson wrote, without referring specifically to Germany's decision to go nuclear-free by 2022. In the letter addressed to EU energy tsar Guenther Oettinger, a copy of which was seen by AFP, Besson said the EU's executive arm should ask the European electricity grid managers to analyse the national consequences of the decision in the short-, medium- and long-term. Besson also calls for an alert cell to be set up "capable to react to all critical situations this summer". Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinet signed this month on a package of bills, prompted by Japan's Fukushima disaster, that foresee Europe's biggest economy being nuclear-free by 2022, and at a faster pace than envisaged. Germany's nine reactors currently on line are due to be turned off between 2015 and 2022. The seven oldest reactors were already switched off after Japan's massive March 11 earthquake and a tsunami knocked out cooling systems at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, causing reactors to overheat and radiation to leak. Some EU nations have since reproached Berlin for not consulting its European partners before announcing the decision. The German move could have particular consequences for France which imports electricity from its neighbour.
earlier related report "This is not a strategic change in direction for the company," minister Eric Besson told AFP, after the government announced that Lauvergeon's deputy Luc Oursel would replace her at the head of the state-held enterprise, one of the world's biggest nuclear energy companies. "On the contrary, we are going to ask Luc Oursel to continue pursuing the various strategic options, even though there will clearly be a certain number of changes linked to Areva's industrial activity, in the new international context," he added. Public alarm over the disaster at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan caused by an earthquake in March has driven some countries to reconsider their stance on nuclear energy. Besson insisted Areva was "well armed" to deal with the shift in attitudes to the sector. Lauvergeon's supporters had been pressing her case for another term at Areva but it was widely believed French President Nicolas Sarkozy did not want her to continue in the post. The French state holds some 90 percent of Areva. "It is a natural renewal," Besson said, hailing Lauvergeon's "good record." "It is not illogical and not shocking that after 10 years at the head of a public company there be a change of leadership," he added. He did not specify what changes might take place, saying only they would be a response to "the market, industrial policy and developments in international markets and clients." A statement from Lauvergeon's office Friday said that she "asks all Areva employees to continue the work undertaken to develop the group and hopes the transition will take place in the best possible conditions."
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