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EDF-Areva Nuclear Dispute disrupts uranium supply and spent-fuel reprocessing at La Hague, amid an 800 million-euro contract standoff, stockpiles at EDF sites, and fears over France's nuclear sector, power generation, and reputation.
The Core Facts
A contract impasse halting uranium deliveries and blocking spent-fuel reprocessing, straining France's nuclear sector.
- Areva pauses uranium deliveries amid contract standoff.
- EDF says fuel stocks suffice for months, no power cuts.
- Spent fuel stays at EDF plants; La Hague reprocessing halted.
- Tension between Anne Lauvergeon and Henri Proglio escalates.
The French nuclear industry is in turmoil as uranium supplies have dried up and the treatment of spent fuel has been blocked amid an increasingly bitter row between the heads of its two main state operators.
EDF, the electricity group that runs 58 reactors in France, said that Areva, the nuclear energy group, had stopped uranium deliveries on January 4 and was refusing to take away spent fuel for reprocessing.
''The transport of combustibles isn't working at the moment,'' Anne Lauvergeon, the chairwoman of Areva, said.
As a result, used fuel is remaining at EDF sites instead of being reprocessed at La Hague treatment plant in northern France.
Mrs Lauvergeon blamed a breakdown in talks over a new €800 million contract with EDF to process spent fuel.
''We've been talking for too long,'' she said, calling on President Sarkozy's Government to resolve the dispute amid EDF privatization protests at home.
Although Areva supplies 68 per cent of the uranium used in EDF's reactors, which themselves produce 77 per cent of electricity in France, where an electricity prices deal was recently reached, the electricity group said it had enough stocks to last several months without envisaging power cuts.
A spokesman said that it could keep spent fuel at its plants without risk of a radioactive leak.
But the dispute is certain to damage the reputation of the two nuclear operators, which are both among the world's biggest, even after the EU dropped antitrust charges against EDF recently.
As insults flew between the two state-owned groups, which are both significant players in Britain's energy sector, including the British Energy sale debate, Areva denied that it had stopped uranium supplies but confirmed EDF's claims about the block on treating spent fuel.
The dispute comes amid tense relations between Mrs Lauvergeon and Henri Proglio, who followed his appointment as chairman of EDF in November with a call for a shake-up of the French nuclear sector after the Constellation-EDF joint venture news.
Their squabble has been cited as one of the factors behind France's failure to secure a €30 billion contract to build reactors in Abu Dhabi.
The contract went to a South Korean consortium led by Korea Electric Power, and Mrs Lauvergeon implicitly blamed EDF for failing to back her in the negotiations.
''I fully assume my responsibilities and those of Areva, but I don't intend to assume other people's,'' she said.
She added: ''South Korea was ready to do anything to win, in terms of price and in state financing.''
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