EDF remains committed to nuclear


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EDF 200 GW capacity by 2020 signals organic growth, nuclear power leadership, and diversification into gas, hydropower, and renewables, aiming to surpass GDF Suez while managing regulated tariffs and post-Fukushima project delays.

 

A Closer Look

EDF will lift capacity to 200 GW by 2020 via organic growth, led by nuclear with gas, hydropower, and renewables support.

  • Target 200 GW by 2020, overtaking GDF Suez's 150 GW plan.
  • Growth is organic; nuclear remains 50% of future output.
  • Remaining mix split: gas-fired generation, hydropower, renewables.

 

French utility EDF aims to become the world's biggest power group by 2020 and will forge ahead with its nuclear investments despite safety doubts cast by Japan's Fukushima disaster, Chairman Henri Proglio said.

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In an interview with French newspaper Le Monde, Proglio said the former monopoly expected to lift its power output capacity to 200 gigawatts GW by 2020 from 150 GW now, overtaking rival GDF Suez, which has targeted a 150 GW capacity by 2016.

"In 2020, EDF must be the world's first electricity company, able to go and seek growth where it is," Proglio, named as the new EDF head by Sarkozy, told the French newspaper in an interview released ahead of EDF's shareholder meeting. "We are aiming for 200 GW by organic growth."

Nuclear power will remain EDF's mainstay, with half of the group's future production derived from it, including plans for an EPR technology club with industry partners to coordinate projects.

Fukushima "does not call nuclear into question," Proglio said, referring to the world's second-worst nuclear accident after Chernobyl, which took place at the quake-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in March.

Proglio said he expected many new nuclear projects around the world to be "delayed or postponed" but insisted countries such as China, the United States, Russia, Britain, Turkey would stick to their plans, as Europe strengthens nuclear capacity across the bloc today.

"Nuclear will be more selective and more demanding," said Proglio, whose company is 85 percent owned by the French state, with moves like joint bids with Areva underscoring that approach today.

While EDF expects to have 50 percent of its power production made from nuclear, the other half will be split equally between gas and power, and hydropower and renewable energies, he said.

Proglio also reaffirmed EDF's interest in taking full control of Italian utility Edison, saying his group had no interest in taking minority or joint shareholding in core activities.

Analysts estimated the operator of France's 58 nuclear reactors would seek to build a strong business in gas or renewable energies to diversify its nuclear-dominated portfolio and reduce its exposure to France's regulated power tariffs.

Such a diversification was a precondition for EDF to regain investor favor, analysts said, after the stock shed two thirds of its value in the past 3-1/2 years.

On tariffs, Proglio told Le Monde EDF needed an average annual rise of 2.5 percent in French government-set power tariffs between now and 2015.

 

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