The French government said Tuesday that it probably would not be able to keep its 2025 deadline for reducing the proportion of electricity generated from nuclear to 50 percent, an admission which angered ecologists.

Environment Minister Nicolas Hulot admitted it "will be difficult to keep to the 2025 calendar without relaunching energy from fossil fuels".

In 2015, the previous Socialist-dominated parliament passed a law obliging the government to reduce the proportion of electricity generated from nuclear to 50 percent by 2025 compared with around 75 percent now.

But "if we want to keep that date of 2025… it will be detrimental to our climate objectives" and hamper the programme of closures of coal-fired power stations.

Greenpeace swiftly urged Hulot to rethink, saying "it's not by backing nuclear that the fight against climate change will be speeded up".

President Emanuel Macron has said he wants France to take the lead as a major world economy switching away from fossil fuels — and the nuclear industry — into renewable sources.

In its climate plan announced in July his centrist government foresees the end of carbon-fuelled electricity production by 2022.

Hulot said it would take some time to come up with a new "realistic date" from bringing nuclear down to 50 percent as planned, saying later that he was working within the 2030-2035 range.

The Climate Action group said it regretted the "retreat" while the anti-nuclear group Reseau Sortir said any such back-pedalling would be "unacceptable".

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Bulgaria extends life of Soviet-era nuclear reactor

Bulgaria's nuclear energy watchdog greenlighted on Friday an extension of the lifespan of one of two Soviet-built reactors at the country's sole nuclear power plant.

The 1,000-megawatt unit in Kozloduy was built in 1987 and its operating licence was due to expire on November 5.

But the BNRA nuclear regulator agreed to extend the permit by another 10 years after extensive equipment checks … read more