French state to pony up billions for cash-strapped EDF by AFP Staff Writers Paris (AFP) Feb 18, 2022 France announced Friday a cash lifeline for state-owned energy giant EDF, which is buckling under massive debt just as it embarks on a new nuclear plant programme pushed by President Emmanuel Macron. EDF's fortunes had already taken a hit after the government ordered it last month to cap electricity bills for French clients, even as prices have spiked on global markets. The measure, which was enacted just weeks before Macron is expected to seek a second term in April, infuriated critics who accused him of electoral posturing that would cost the company some eight billion euros ($9.1 billion). While EDF normally generates the bulk of its electricity from its network of 56 nuclear reactors across France, many are near the end of their 40-year lifespans and around a dozen have been shut or will be soon to carry out safety inspections over corrosion risks. That will force the group to buy power on the European market, expected to cost it some 11 billion euros this year -- even as its total debt load now stands at 43 billion euros. "EDF is experiencing problems linked to reactor outages, it's selling less nuclear power, and so it's revenues are down and it needs financial support from the state," Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told RTL radio. This month Macron announced plans to build as many as 14 new next-generation EPR2 reactors to reduce the country's reliance on fossil fuels, which EDF has said could cost some 50 billion euros. EDF has also been corralled into buying the nuclear turbine operations in France from the American conglomerate GE, which had bought the business just six years before when Macron was finance minister. Le Maire said the government would inject 2.1 billion euros as part of an upcoming capital increase, while the company announced plans to sell assets worth three billion euros in the coming years. jmi-boc/js/jh/lth
Nuclear power may be the key to least-cost, zero-emission electricity systems Washington DC (SPX) Feb 15, 2022 Nuclear power generation can play a crucial role in helping the world reach a key goal of zero carbon emissions by the middle of the century, especially in countries with low wind resources, according to new work in Nature Energy from Lei Duan and Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie's Department of Global Ecology. Human activity is spewing carbon pollution into the atmosphere, affecting the global carbon cycle and causing warming, as well as altered precipitation patterns. According to the Intergovernmen ... read more
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