Belgium postpones its nuclear phase-out by ten years – 2022-03-18 at 22:19


BRUSSELS, March 18 (Reuters) – Belgium postponed its nuclear phase-out by ten years on Friday, previously set for 2025, for the sake of energy independence in the face of the upheavals caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The coalition government of Alexander de Croo has decided to extend the life of the Doel 4 and Tihange 3 reactors until 2035, while the nuclear phase-out plan adopted in 2003 provided for the closure of all the power plants in by 2025, and at the same time to accelerate the transition to renewable energies.

“Everyone knows that there is a war in Europe,” explained Alexander de Croo during a press conference after a government meeting lasting several hours. “We choose certainty in uncertain times.”

“We have decided that the two reactors can be extended for ten years”, declared the Belgian Prime Minister.

The two reactors, the most recent in the country, which entered service in 1985, are operated by the French group Engie

ENGIE.PA, which must therefore give its consent.

Tihange 3 is a 1,038 megawatt reactor located on the Meuse in the province of Liège in eastern Belgium. Doel 4 is a 1,039 megawatt reactor located near Antwerp.

The exit strategy from nuclear power in Belgium was initially to be based on the development of natural gas, with in particular the construction of a gas-fired power station north of Brussels.

But since the war led by Moscow in Ukraine, the Europeans have decided to gradually reduce their heavy dependence on Russian hydrocarbons and to end it by 2027. nL5N2VE4UR

(Report Robin Emmott, French version Jean-Stéphane Brosse)



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