French nuclear agency to sell Areva stake

subscribe

The French state nuclear agency aims to sell 25 per cent of Areva, the biggest builder of nuclear reactors, to help pay for decommissioning of old facilities, according to its chief executive.

Commissariat l'Energie Atomique (CEA), which owns 79 per cent of Areva, needs about ($7.2bn), from the sale to decommission old laboratories and equipment as required by French law.

Areva, based in Paris, would also need to sell new shares to extend its uranium mining business and ride the global revival in nuclear energy, he said.

The stake sale would be part of a broad shake-up of the French nuclear industry. President Nicolas Sarkozy has asked the finance ministry to review all possible options for Areva, including selling shares to the public or merging it with the power stations maker Alstom.

The state directly or indirectly owns 93.4 per cent of Areva, of which CEA holds the bulk.

The final decision on the stake sale will come from the government. The state would want to keep a golden share, or an equivalent controlling mechanism, in units that were of strategic importance to France, Bugat said.

These include Areva's nuclear submarines units and the whole nuclear fuel supply chain, from uranium mining to fuel recycling, he said.

Companies like Areva and Westinghouse Electric of the United States, now owned by Toshiba of Japan, are vying for a bigger piece of a market that is expanding as countries from Britain to China plan to build more nuclear reactors to reduce reliance on crude oil and gas.

Related News

turkey in the oven

Christmas electricity spike equivalent to roasting 1.5 million turkeys: BC Hydro

VANCOUVER - BC Hydro is reminding British Columbians to conserve power over the holidays after a report commissioned by the utility found the arrival of guests for Christmas dinner results in a 15% increase in electricity usage. 

Cooking appears to be the number one culprit for the uptick in peoples’ hydro bills. According to BC Hydro press release, British Columbians use about 8,000 megawatt hours more of electricity by mid-day Christmas — that's about 1.5 million turkeys roasted in electric ovens.
 article continues below 

About 95% of British Columbians said they would make meals at home from scratch over the holiday season.…

READ MORE
hydro one

Hydro One extends ban on electricity disconnections until further notice

READ MORE

Energy-hungry Europe to brighten profit at US solar equipment makers

READ MORE

vancouver skyline at night

Electricity use actually increased during 2018 Earth Hour, BC Hydro

READ MORE

philippines-reaffirms-clean-energy-commitment

Philippines Reaffirms Clean Energy Commitment at APEC Summit

READ MORE