Macron announces new reactors: France is now building small nuclear power plants

Macron announces new reactors
France is now building small nuclear power plants

France does not want to do without nuclear power plants on its way to climate neutrality. On the contrary: President Macron announces a new era of small reactors that should solve the waste problem. After the USA, the country is number two in the world for the production of nuclear power.

French President Emmanuel Macron has announced the construction of a new generation of nuclear power plants. In a televised address in the evening, Macron justified this with the fight against climate change and concerns about a reliable energy supply. At the same time, however, the development of renewable energies should also be continued.

France is one of the countries that have been using nuclear energy for a long time and want to stick to it. 56 reactors are currently in operation there. Macron said in the TV address: “In order to ensure France’s energy independence, secure our country’s electricity supply and achieve our goal of carbon neutrality by 2050, we will restart the construction of nuclear reactors in our country for the first time in decades.” A few weeks ago he announced his intention to create smaller reactors by 2030, which should also make it easier to deal with nuclear waste.

Study by the network operator on CO2-neutral energy supply

Unlike Germany, France continued to rely on nuclear energy after the disaster in Fukushima, Japan in 2011. The oldest nuclear power plant in the country in Fessenheim, Alsace, was shut down last year, and further reactor units are to be taken off the grid by 2035. However, France is currently still in second place behind the USA among the world’s largest producers of nuclear power.

According to a study by the French network operator RTE, CO2-neutral electricity operation without new nuclear power plants by 2050 would only be possible with enormous efforts. Excessive costs and technical problems have recently hampered the expansion of nuclear power by the state energy company EDF. An operating license was recently issued for a controversial nuclear reactor in Flamanville on the English Channel, construction of which began in 2007. Commissioning was last postponed to the end of 2022 – also because leaky welds were discovered in the steel shell. Instead of the originally estimated 3.3 billion, the costs are now probably more than twelve billion euros.

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