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Électricité de France

Électricité de France S.A. (literally Electricity of France), commonly known as EDF, is a French multinational electric utility company owned by the government of France. Headquartered in Paris, with €143.5 billion in revenues in 2022,[2] EDF operates a diverse portfolio of at least 120 gigawatts of generation capacity in Europe, South America, North America, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa.

Électricité de France (EDF)
Tour EDF, La Défense, near Paris, where EDF's commerce division is located.
Company typePublic (Société Anonyme)
Euronext Paris: EDF
CAC Next 20 Component
IndustryElectric utility
PredecessorCompagnie d'Électricité de l'Ouest Parisien 
Founded1946; 78 years ago (1946)
FounderGovernment of France under the direction of Provisional Government Minister for Industrial Production Marcel Paul
HeadquartersTour EDF, ,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Luc Rémont (Chairman and CEO)[1]
ProductsElectricity generation, transmission and distribution; energy trading
Revenue 143.5 billion (2022)[2]
-€5 billion (2022)[2]
-€18.2 billion (2022)[2]
Total assets €388,132 million (2022)[2]
OwnerAgence des participations de l'État (100%)[3]
Number of employees
165,000 (2021)[4]
Subsidiaries
Websitewww.edf.com

In 2009, EDF was the world's largest producer of electricity.[5] Its 56 active nuclear reactors (in France) are spread out over 18 sites (nuclear power plants). They comprise 32 reactors of 900 MWe, 20 reactors of 1,300 MWe, and 4 reactors of 1,450 MWe, all PWRs.

EDF was created on 8 April 1946 by the 1945 parliament, from the merging of various divided actors. EDF led France's post-war energy growth, with a unique focus on civil nuclear energy, through reconstruction and further industrialization within the Trente Glorieuses, being a flagship of France's new industrial landscape. In 2004, following integration into the European Common Market, EDF was privatized, although the government of France retained 84% equity. In 2017 EDF took over the majority of the reactor business Areva, in a French government-sponsored restructuring.[6][7][8] That same year, following a wish to divest from nuclear energy, the possible closure of 17 of EDF's French nuclear power reactors by 2025 was announced.[9] However, by 2022 this decision had been reversed, with the administration of president Emmanuel Macron announcing plans for a "nuclear renaissance", beginning with the projected construction of 6 EPR model 2 reactors with an option for 8 further reactors.[10] Meanwhile, construction is ongoing on EPR model 1 reactors in France and Britain.

Following privatization, decades of under-investment, and the 2021–2022 global energy crisis the Government of France announced the full renationalisation of the company for an estimated cost of €5 billion, which it completed in 2023.[11]

The EDF group edit

Activities edit

EDF specialises in electricity, from engineering to distribution. The company's operations include the following: electricity generation and distribution; power plant design, construction and dismantling; energy trading; and transport. It is active in such power generation technologies as nuclear power, hydropower, wind power, solar energy, biomass, geothermal energy and fossil-fired energy.[12]

In November 2022, EDF agreed the acquisition of GE Steam Power's nuclear activities, which include the manufacture of non-nuclear equipment for new nuclear power plants including steam turbines and the maintenance and upgrade of existing nuclear power plants outside America.[13]

Distribution network (RTE and Enedis) edit

The electricity network in France is composed of the following:

  • a high- and very-high-voltage transmission system (100,000 km of lines). This part of the system is managed by RTE (electricity transmission system operator) who acts as an independent administrator of infrastructure, although it is a subsidiary of EDF;
  • a low- and medium-voltage distribution system (1,300,000 km of lines),[14] maintained by Enedis (ex-ERDF), formerly known as EDF-Gaz de France Distribution. Enedis (ex-ERDF) was spun off from EDF-Gaz de France Distribution in 2008 as part of the process of total separation of the activities of EDF and GDF Suez.[15]

Organization edit

Head office edit

 
EDF head office, 22–30 avenue de Wagram, Paris 8th arr.

The EDF head office is located along Avenue de Wagram in the 8th arrondissement of Paris. The EDF head office is shared between several EDF sites in Greater Paris.[16]

The directorate edit

Business edit

  • As a major player in energy transition, the EDF Group is an integrated energy company active in all businesses: generation, transmission, distribution, energy trading, energy sales and energy services, and is gaining over 143,5 billion euros, with over 37,6 million customers worldwide, in 2015.

Statistics edit

  • Customers: 37.6 million worldwide in 2015.
  • 2009 Turnover: €63.34 billion (23% from France) – €41.82 billion in 2002.
  • Profit: €3.96 billion in 2010 – €3.96 billion in 2009.
  • Net profit: €1 billion in 2010 – €3.92 billion in 2009.
  • Net Debt: €34.4 billion in 2010 – €42.5 billion in 2009.
  • Revenue: €75 billion in 2015.
  • Energy generation: 619.3 TWh in 2015.
  • Employees: 165,200 worldwide.[17]

Main partners and affiliates edit

  • In Europe:
    • United Kingdom: 100% EDF Energy, acquired British Energy, which generates about 20 percent of British electricity, mainly from 8 nuclear plants, 100% EDF Trading
    • Austria: 100% Vero
    • Belgium: 100% Luminus
    • France: 100% of EDF Énergies Nouvelles which in turn owns EDF-RE, formerly EnXco in US, 74.86% Électricité de Strasbourg, 67% Dalkia Investments, 51% TIRU, 50% Cerga, 50% Edenkia, 50% Dalkia International, 50% SIIF Énergies, 34% Dalkia Hdg
    • Germany: 100% EDF Ostalbkreis, 100% EDF Weinsberg, 50% RKI
    • Hungary: 95.56% BE Zrt
    • Ireland: 100% (as EDF Renewables Ireland and subsidiary Wexford Solar Energy)
    • Italy: Edison S.p.A. (99.4% of the capital), 100% EDF Energia Italia which sells directly 2.2 TWh to Italy, 100% Edison Next, 40% Finei, 30% ISE
    • The Netherlands: 100% Finelex, 50% Cinergy Holding
    • Poland: 76.63% Rybnik, 66.08% ECK, 49.19% ECW, 35.42% Kogeneracja, 24.61% Zielona Gora
    • Slovakia: 49% SSE
    • Spain: 100% EDF Iberica (EDF Península Ibérica, S.A)[18]
    • Sweden: 100% Skandrenkraft, 36.32% Groupe Graninge
    • Switzerland: 50% Chatelot, 50% Emosson, 14.25% Groupe ATEL, 26.26% Motor Columbus
  • In the Americas:
    • United States: 100% EDF Inc., which controls fully or partially Unistar Nuclear Energy (100%), EDF-RE, formerly EnXco (100%), EDF Trading North America (100%) and Constellation Energy Nuclear Group (50% through a joint venture with Exelon)
    • Argentina: 25% Edenor, 45% Sodemsa, 22.95% Edemsa
    • Brazil: 100% Lidil, 90% Norte Fluminense
  • In Asia:
    • China: 85% Synergie, 60% Figlec, 35% Datang Sanmenxia Power Company, 19.6% Shandong Zhonghua Power Company
    • Vietnam: 56.25% Meco
  • In Africa:
    • Côte d'Ivoire: 50% Azito O&M, 32.85% Azito Energie[19]

History edit

Status of EDF edit

EDF was founded on 8 April 1946, as a result of the nationalisation of around 1,700 smaller energy producers, transporters and distributors by the Minister of Industrial Production Marcel Paul. Mostly a state-owned EPIC, it became the main electricity generation and distribution company in France, enjoying a monopoly in electricity generation, although some small local distributors were retained by the nationalisation.[19] This monopoly ended in 1999, when EDF was forced by a European Directive to open up 20% of its business to competitors.[20]

Until 19 November 2004, EDF was a state-owned corporation, but became a limited-liability corporation under private law (société anonyme), after its status was changed by statute. The French government partially floated shares of the company on the Paris Stock Exchange in November 2005,[21] although it retained almost 85% ownership as of the end of 2008.[22]

On 22 November 2016, French competition regulators raided EDF offices, looking for evidence that EDF was abusing its dominant position to manipulate electricity prices and squeeze rivals.[23]

Finances edit

Between 2001 and 2003, EDF was forced to reduce its equity capital by €6.4 billion total because of the performance of subsidiaries in South America and Europe. In 2001, it also acquired a number of British energy companies, becoming the UK's biggest electricity supplier.[24]

The company remains heavily in debt. Its profitability suffered during the recession which began in 2008. It made €3.9 billion in 2009, which fell to €1.02 billion in 2010, with provisions set aside amounting to €2.9 billion.[25]

In January 2013 the company sold its 1.6% stake in U.S. utility Exelon for $470 million.[26]

In March 2016 EDF's Chief Financial Officer, Thomas Piquemal, who had argued that the final investment decision on building Hinkley Point C nuclear power station should be delayed for three years, resigned. With EDF's market value halved over the preceding year, the cost of the Hinkley Point C project now exceeded the entire market capitalisation of EDF.[27][28]

In March 2017 EDF offered a €4bn rights issue of new shares to increase capital availability, at a 34.5% discount. The French government committed to purchasing €3bn of the rights issue. Shares prices fell to an all-time low due to the heavy discount on new shares.[29]

EDF's net debt at the end of 2018 was €33 billion, but with future obligations such as pension liabilities and costs for managing nuclear waste allowed for, the adjusted net debt was €70 billion. In order to improve EDF's finances, as of 2019 EDF has sold €10 billion of assets, with plans to sell a further €2 to €3 billion of assets by 2021, and shareholders have been allocated new shares rather than cash dividends. Bonds have been issued in Asian currencies to expand sources of funding. It has financial commitments for new builds at Flamanville and Hinkley Point C. EDF is committed to spending €49.4 billion by 2025 for life extension of its French nuclear reactor fleet, which as of 2019 has an average age of 33 years, to 50 years.[30][31]

In December 2021, EDF had about €43 billion of debt, which investment analysts Morningstar expected to exceed €60bn by the end of 2022. EDF's credit rating was downgraded in February 2022.[32]

Energy policy edit

 
EDF produces its electricity primarily from nuclear power plants

France is the world's largest user of nuclear power for electricity (78% of French production in 2007).

In May 2004, the French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy reasserted, in front of the French Parliament, the primacy of nuclear power, much to the relief of labour unions of EDF. In this speech, the minister re-phrased the famous slogan, "We do not have oil, but we have ideas", by declaring: "We do not have oil, we do not have gas, we do not have coal, but we had ideas". Depleted uranium from reprocessing the spent fuel of the 58 French nuclear power plants were exported from Le Havre to Russia in the last years and stored in Seversk where it was enriched, and the new fuel was exported back to France.[33]

In 2013 EDF acknowledged the difficulties it was having building the new EPR nuclear reactor design, with its head of production and engineering, Hervé Machenaud, saying EDF had lost its dominant international position in design and construction of nuclear power stations.[34] In September 2015 EDF's chief executive Jean-Bernard Lévy stated that the design of a "New Model" EPR was being worked on, which will be easier to build, to be ready for orders from about 2020.[35][needs update]

In 2016 EDF's chief executive Jean-Bernard Lévy stated that EDF's 2030 strategy increased the emphasis on renewable energy, with a 2030 goal of doubling renewable energy capacity worldwide. He stated "I am convinced that we will still have a centralised and secure system in the future but it will be supplemented by a more intermittent and local decentralised system, in which customers will take charge of their consumption. In readiness for this, we must press on with research into electricity storage and smart electricity systems".[36]

EDF spying conviction edit

In 2011, a French court fined EDF €1.5m and jailed two senior employees for spying on Greenpeace, including hacking into Greenpeace's computer systems. Greenpeace was awarded €500,000 in damages.[37] Although EDF claimed that a security firm had only been employed to monitor Greenpeace, the court disagreed, jailing the head and deputy head of EDF's nuclear security operation for three years each. Two employees of the security firm, Kargus, run by a former member of France's secret services, received sentences of three and two years respectively.[38][39] Charges were mostly dismissed in appeal in 2013.

DDoS attack on EDF site edit

EDF's website was brought down by DDoS attacks three times in 2011, twice in April and once later in June.[40]

The attacks were claimed by the hacktivist group Anonymous. Three men were later arrested and interviewed on charges of "obstructing functionality of a data processing service", "fraudulent access of a data processing service" and "participation in an association formed with the aim of preparing such infractions".[40]

Motivations for the attack were thought to relate to the Fukushima nuclear accident in Japan.[40] Unlike Switzerland and Germany, which plan to close down all nuclear reactors at the end of their lifespan, the government of France had no such plans to move away from nuclear power and three months after the Fukushima meltdown, stated a budget increase for nuclear power.[41]

The downtime of the EDF website cost the company an estimated €162,000.[42]

Suing No Dash For Gas edit

In February 2013 EDF Energy sought an estimated £5 million in damages from environmental activists from the No Dash for Gas campaign that occupied the EDF-owned West Burton CCGT power station in October 2012.[43][44]

It is unusual in the UK for companies to seek damages from protesters.[45] On 13 March 2013, EDF dropped their lawsuit against the protesters, after agreeing a permanent injunction against protesters entering EDF sites.[46]

Absorption of Areva reactor business edit

In 2017 EDF took over the majority of the reactor business of Areva, excluding the fuel business, in a French government sponsored restructuring following financial and technical problems at Areva due to the building of new EPR nuclear plants.[6][7][8] The reactor business has been named Framatome.

In October 2019 French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire released an audit report on the construction of the heavily delayed and nearly four times over-budget Flamanville 3 EPR development, started by Areva in 2007. The Finance Minister demanded EDF present within a month an action plan for the project, calling it a "failure for the entire French nuclear industry".[47]

Effect of coronavirus pandemic edit

In April 2020 EDF estimated the economic slowdown due to the coronavirus pandemic could potentially reduce electricity consumption in France by 20%. EDF estimated annual nuclear output in France would be about 300 TWh in 2020 and 330-360 TWh in 2021 and 2022, down from a pre-coronavirus estimate of 375-390 TWh. Some nuclear reactors will likely be taken offline in the summer of 2020.[needs update] EDF announced it had withdrawn financial targets for 2020 and 2021. A delay of planned 10-year reactor upgrades this year may be necessary.[48][49]

To mitigate the impact EDF is targeting €500 million of cost savings to 2022, and aims to sell €3 billion of assets to 2022.[50]

2021 stress corrosion cracking crisis edit

In October 2021, stress corrosion cracking in stainless steel safety system piping was discovered, eventually requiring rolling fleet-wide shutdowns for inspections and repair during 2022 and 2023. This reduced electricity production in 2022 to 279 TWh, 82 TWh less than expected, with a continuing shortfall in 2023. To meet demand, EDF had to buy electricity on the European market at high prices, costing an estimated 29 billion to June 2023.[51]

In late May 2022, when 12 nuclear reactors were offline, EDF increased the estimated earnings reductions for the inspections and repairs to €18.5 billion.[52][53]

2021 global energy crisis edit

EDF had to sell a further 20 TWh of power to other domestic suppliers at a reduced price due to the government response to the 2021 global energy crisis.[54][55] In January 2022, EDF calculated that the increase in reduced price wholesale supply would cost it €8.4 billion (£7 billion), and it withdrew its profit guidance. The EDF share price fell considerably. EDF's debt is about €41 billion, and Fitch Ratings lowered EDF's credit rating.[56]

2022 Re-nationalization edit

On 6 July 2022, French prime minister Élisabeth Borne announced that "the French government is aiming for a full nationalization of" EDF.[32][57] Borne "vowed" to limit the impact of the rise in energy prices through the state having "full control over...electricity production and performance.” Borne told parliament, "we must ensure our sovereignty in the face of...the colossal challenges to come."[58] Earlier in 2022, President Emmanuel Macron had "suggested" a renationalization of EDF as well as a "big expansion of nuclear energy in the coming decades"[59] however, in 2021, he had to scrap an "overhaul" of EDF, codenamed "Project Hercules," that would have placed EDF's profitable renewables sector in a new company, due to opposition by unions and objections raised by the European Commission.[60]

In March 2023, EDF created the NUWARD subsidiary to design and manufacture a 170 MWe small modular reactor, delivered as two units with an integrated primary loop, for construction from 2030.[61]

Renewable energies edit

Plug-in hybrids and V2G edit

EDF has developed recharging points for the Toyota Plug-in HV in France[62]

The French government has contributed $550 million to a partnership by Électricité de France with Renault-Nissan and with PSA Peugeot Citroen.[63]

Photovoltaics edit

In 2018 EDF had plans to invest up to €25 billion in photovoltaics solar power generation, and introduce green electricity tariffs.[64]

Carbon Intensity edit

year Production (TWh) Emission (Mt CO2) kg CO2/MWh
2002 650 91.35 141
2003 669 96.34 144
2004 647 95.74 148
2005 647 93.52 145
2006 655 93.35 142
2007 706 101.91 144
2008 704 103.79 147
2009 652 88.09 135

Tidal farms edit

Competitors edit

As of 2017, EDF still held the business of 85.5% of France's residential customers, though on a slow downward trend.[64]

Main competitors edit

Apart from foreign producers and distributors, there are some significant competitors of EDF in France, although their market share is weaker in comparison:

  • Engie: the company formed after the merger of Gaz de France and Suez clearly intends to produce its own electricity, has bought stake in the future EPR nuclear reactors and is poised to become the most credible competitor of EDF in the newly liberalised French electricity market;
  • SNET (Société nationale d'électricité et de thermique): This company is the successor of depleting coal companies and primarily produce thermal electricity (2.5 TWh). Its capital (81%) belonged predominantly to Collieries of France and with EDF. A portion of the capital (30%) was sold to Endesa, the main Spanish electricity producer, another portion of 35% was sold in 2004. As of 2008 Endesa holds 65% of the equity of the generating company Snet;[66]
  • CNR (Compagnie nationale du Rhône): the capital of which is predominantly public, the company exploits 19 hydroelectric plants installed on the banks of the Rhône. Its production of 19 TWh makes it the second largest French producer with 4% of the market. CNR signed a partnership agreement with Electrabel;
  • SHEM (Société hydro-électrique du Midi): a subsidiary of SNCF, of which produces about one-third of the electricity used by SNCF. A partnership agreement was signed with Electrabel.

Locally controlled or between local councils edit

Among the other rivals of EDF, one can count a number of municipally governed companies, known under the generic term 'entreprises locales de distribution' ('local businesses of distribution'), who are electricity producers exploiting EDF's network.

The nationalisation of electricity and gas on 8 April 1946, which profoundly changed the French electrical and gas organization, had however acknowledged the right of villages to keep their role in the public distribution of electricity and gas.

In 1946, certain firms, villages or groups of villages, did not accept the proposal of nationalisation and created autonomous state controls (who held the monopoly of distribution, until 2004, in their area). To note, contrary to the initial idea, local controllers of electricity, have had, since 1946, the choice to continue to produce electricity. In fact, their production was rather marginal, except in Rhône-Alpes; having often preferred buying the majority of the electrical power from EDF. With the recent opening of the electricity market, local controllers are considering developing, augmenting and diversifying their own production, (e.g. Ouest Énergie, the subsidiary company of SIEDS) and/or diversifying their sources of supply.

To date, the number of local businesses of distribution is approximately 170 and holds 5% of the distribution of French electrical power in 2,500 villages. Created by local authorities, they serve about 3 million people and represent 7,000 jobs. Around thirty of them – 9 during creation in 1962 – are federated in a national entity known as ANROC.[67]

Several departments are not, therefore, served entirely or partly by EDF, for instance:

  • Deux-Sèvres, supplied by SIEDS: partnership between local councils of Electricity of Deux-Sèvres;
  • Vienne, supplied by SIEEDV: partnership between local councils of Electricity and Works of the Department of Vienne;
  • Charente-Maritime, supplied by SDEER: partnership of Electricity and Rural Works of the Department of Charente-Maritime;
  • Gironde, supplied by Gironde Electricity. However, the company was sold to EDF at the beginning of 2000 because it could not financially maintain the damage of the severe weather of December 1999, on its network;
  • Alsace;
  • Rhône-Alpes.

Security edit

Enedis was one of the first companies to carry out preventive maintenance on these wooden poles, with the aim of safeguarding the safety of its personnel, in particular with the Polux tool, which has become its reference standard.[68][69]

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ "Structure du capital". www.edf.fr (in French). 29 December 2023. Retrieved 29 December 2023. As of 31 July 2023.
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  63. ^ Nastu, Paul (13 October 2008). "French President Gives EVs, Hybrids Green Light". Environmental Leader. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  64. ^ a b Cat Rutter Pooley (16 February 2018). "EDF revenues slip as nuclear pressures bite". Financial Times. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  65. ^ "Paimpol-Brehat Tidal Demonstration Project". Tethys. 25 July 2019. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  66. ^ "source".
  67. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 October 2005. Retrieved 9 July 2005.
  68. ^ "CBT : le contrôle non destructif du bois au service de son usage efficient". www.leboisinternational.com (in French). 7 June 2022. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  69. ^ "Intervention JP HIPPIAS RS CNSHSCT UES Orange conférence de presse-dangerosité poteaux bois le 24 mars 2017 à Valence" (PDF).

External links edit

  • Official website

Électricité, france, literally, electricity, france, commonly, known, french, multinational, electric, utility, company, owned, government, france, headquartered, paris, with, billion, revenues, 2022, operates, diverse, portfolio, least, gigawatts, generation,. Electricite de France S A literally Electricity of France commonly known as EDF is a French multinational electric utility company owned by the government of France Headquartered in Paris with 143 5 billion in revenues in 2022 2 EDF operates a diverse portfolio of at least 120 gigawatts of generation capacity in Europe South America North America Asia the Middle East and Africa Electricite de France EDF Tour EDF La Defense near Paris where EDF s commerce division is located Company typePublic Societe Anonyme Traded asEuronext Paris EDF CAC Next 20 ComponentIndustryElectric utilityPredecessorCompagnie d Electricite de l Ouest Parisien Founded1946 78 years ago 1946 FounderGovernment of France under the direction of Provisional Government Minister for Industrial Production Marcel PaulHeadquartersTour EDF Paris FranceArea servedWorldwideKey peopleLuc Remont Chairman and CEO 1 ProductsElectricity generation transmission and distribution energy tradingRevenue 143 5 billion 2022 2 Operating income 5 billion 2022 2 Net income 18 2 billion 2022 2 Total assets 388 132 million 2022 2 OwnerAgence des participations de l Etat 100 3 Number of employees165 000 2021 4 SubsidiariesDalkiaEdison S p A EDF EnergyEDF RenewablesLuminusWebsitewww wbr edf wbr comIn 2009 EDF was the world s largest producer of electricity 5 Its 56 active nuclear reactors in France are spread out over 18 sites nuclear power plants They comprise 32 reactors of 900 MWe 20 reactors of 1 300 MWe and 4 reactors of 1 450 MWe all PWRs EDF was created on 8 April 1946 by the 1945 parliament from the merging of various divided actors EDF led France s post war energy growth with a unique focus on civil nuclear energy through reconstruction and further industrialization within the Trente Glorieuses being a flagship of France s new industrial landscape In 2004 following integration into the European Common Market EDF was privatized although the government of France retained 84 equity In 2017 EDF took over the majority of the reactor business Areva in a French government sponsored restructuring 6 7 8 That same year following a wish to divest from nuclear energy the possible closure of 17 of EDF s French nuclear power reactors by 2025 was announced 9 However by 2022 this decision had been reversed with the administration of president Emmanuel Macron announcing plans for a nuclear renaissance beginning with the projected construction of 6 EPR model 2 reactors with an option for 8 further reactors 10 Meanwhile construction is ongoing on EPR model 1 reactors in France and Britain Following privatization decades of under investment and the 2021 2022 global energy crisis the Government of France announced the full renationalisation of the company for an estimated cost of 5 billion which it completed in 2023 11 Contents 1 The EDF group 1 1 Activities 1 1 1 Distribution network RTE and Enedis 1 2 Organization 1 2 1 Head office 1 2 2 The directorate 1 3 Business 1 3 1 Statistics 1 3 2 Main partners and affiliates 2 History 2 1 Status of EDF 2 2 Finances 2 3 Energy policy 2 4 EDF spying conviction 2 5 DDoS attack on EDF site 2 6 Suing No Dash For Gas 2 7 Absorption of Areva reactor business 2 8 Effect of coronavirus pandemic 2 9 2021 stress corrosion cracking crisis 2 10 2021 global energy crisis 2 11 2022 Re nationalization 3 Renewable energies 3 1 Plug in hybrids and V2G 3 2 Photovoltaics 3 3 Carbon Intensity 3 4 Tidal farms 4 Competitors 4 1 Main competitors 4 2 Locally controlled or between local councils 4 3 Security 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksThe EDF group editActivities edit EDF specialises in electricity from engineering to distribution The company s operations include the following electricity generation and distribution power plant design construction and dismantling energy trading and transport It is active in such power generation technologies as nuclear power hydropower wind power solar energy biomass geothermal energy and fossil fired energy 12 In November 2022 EDF agreed the acquisition of GE Steam Power s nuclear activities which include the manufacture of non nuclear equipment for new nuclear power plants including steam turbines and the maintenance and upgrade of existing nuclear power plants outside America 13 Distribution network RTE and Enedis edit The electricity network in France is composed of the following a high and very high voltage transmission system 100 000 km of lines This part of the system is managed by RTE electricity transmission system operator who acts as an independent administrator of infrastructure although it is a subsidiary of EDF a low and medium voltage distribution system 1 300 000 km of lines 14 maintained by Enedis ex ERDF formerly known as EDF Gaz de France Distribution Enedis ex ERDF was spun off from EDF Gaz de France Distribution in 2008 as part of the process of total separation of the activities of EDF and GDF Suez 15 Organization edit Head office edit nbsp EDF head office 22 30 avenue de Wagram Paris 8th arr The EDF head office is located along Avenue de Wagram in the 8th arrondissement of Paris The EDF head office is shared between several EDF sites in Greater Paris 16 The directorate edit Chairman and CEO Luc RemontBusiness edit As a major player in energy transition the EDF Group is an integrated energy company active in all businesses generation transmission distribution energy trading energy sales and energy services and is gaining over 143 5 billion euros with over 37 6 million customers worldwide in 2015 Statistics edit Customers 37 6 million worldwide in 2015 2009 Turnover 63 34 billion 23 from France 41 82 billion in 2002 Profit 3 96 billion in 2010 3 96 billion in 2009 Net profit 1 billion in 2010 3 92 billion in 2009 Net Debt 34 4 billion in 2010 42 5 billion in 2009 Revenue 75 billion in 2015 Energy generation 619 3 TWh in 2015 Employees 165 200 worldwide 17 Main partners and affiliates edit In Europe United Kingdom 100 EDF Energy acquired British Energy which generates about 20 percent of British electricity mainly from 8 nuclear plants 100 EDF Trading Austria 100 Vero Belgium 100 Luminus France 100 of EDF Energies Nouvelles which in turn owns EDF RE formerly EnXco in US 74 86 Electricite de Strasbourg 67 Dalkia Investments 51 TIRU 50 Cerga 50 Edenkia 50 Dalkia International 50 SIIF Energies 34 Dalkia Hdg Germany 100 EDF Ostalbkreis 100 EDF Weinsberg 50 RKI Hungary 95 56 BE Zrt Ireland 100 as EDF Renewables Ireland and subsidiary Wexford Solar Energy Italy Edison S p A 99 4 of the capital 100 EDF Energia Italia which sells directly 2 2 TWh to Italy 100 Edison Next 40 Finei 30 ISE The Netherlands 100 Finelex 50 Cinergy Holding Poland 76 63 Rybnik 66 08 ECK 49 19 ECW 35 42 Kogeneracja 24 61 Zielona Gora Slovakia 49 SSE Spain 100 EDF Iberica EDF Peninsula Iberica S A 18 Sweden 100 Skandrenkraft 36 32 Groupe Graninge Switzerland 50 Chatelot 50 Emosson 14 25 Groupe ATEL 26 26 Motor Columbus In the Americas United States 100 EDF Inc which controls fully or partially Unistar Nuclear Energy 100 EDF RE formerly EnXco 100 EDF Trading North America 100 and Constellation Energy Nuclear Group 50 through a joint venture with Exelon Argentina 25 Edenor 45 Sodemsa 22 95 Edemsa Brazil 100 Lidil 90 Norte Fluminense In Asia China 85 Synergie 60 Figlec 35 Datang Sanmenxia Power Company 19 6 Shandong Zhonghua Power Company Vietnam 56 25 Meco In Africa Cote d Ivoire 50 Azito O amp M 32 85 Azito Energie 19 History editStatus of EDF edit EDF was founded on 8 April 1946 as a result of the nationalisation of around 1 700 smaller energy producers transporters and distributors by the Minister of Industrial Production Marcel Paul Mostly a state owned EPIC it became the main electricity generation and distribution company in France enjoying a monopoly in electricity generation although some small local distributors were retained by the nationalisation 19 This monopoly ended in 1999 when EDF was forced by a European Directive to open up 20 of its business to competitors 20 Until 19 November 2004 EDF was a state owned corporation but became a limited liability corporation under private law societe anonyme after its status was changed by statute The French government partially floated shares of the company on the Paris Stock Exchange in November 2005 21 although it retained almost 85 ownership as of the end of 2008 22 On 22 November 2016 French competition regulators raided EDF offices looking for evidence that EDF was abusing its dominant position to manipulate electricity prices and squeeze rivals 23 Finances edit Between 2001 and 2003 EDF was forced to reduce its equity capital by 6 4 billion total because of the performance of subsidiaries in South America and Europe In 2001 it also acquired a number of British energy companies becoming the UK s biggest electricity supplier 24 The company remains heavily in debt Its profitability suffered during the recession which began in 2008 It made 3 9 billion in 2009 which fell to 1 02 billion in 2010 with provisions set aside amounting to 2 9 billion 25 In January 2013 the company sold its 1 6 stake in U S utility Exelon for 470 million 26 In March 2016 EDF s Chief Financial Officer Thomas Piquemal who had argued that the final investment decision on building Hinkley Point C nuclear power station should be delayed for three years resigned With EDF s market value halved over the preceding year the cost of the Hinkley Point C project now exceeded the entire market capitalisation of EDF 27 28 In March 2017 EDF offered a 4bn rights issue of new shares to increase capital availability at a 34 5 discount The French government committed to purchasing 3bn of the rights issue Shares prices fell to an all time low due to the heavy discount on new shares 29 EDF s net debt at the end of 2018 was 33 billion but with future obligations such as pension liabilities and costs for managing nuclear waste allowed for the adjusted net debt was 70 billion In order to improve EDF s finances as of 2019 EDF has sold 10 billion of assets with plans to sell a further 2 to 3 billion of assets by 2021 and shareholders have been allocated new shares rather than cash dividends Bonds have been issued in Asian currencies to expand sources of funding It has financial commitments for new builds at Flamanville and Hinkley Point C EDF is committed to spending 49 4 billion by 2025 for life extension of its French nuclear reactor fleet which as of 2019 has an average age of 33 years to 50 years 30 31 In December 2021 EDF had about 43 billion of debt which investment analysts Morningstar expected to exceed 60bn by the end of 2022 EDF s credit rating was downgraded in February 2022 32 Energy policy edit nbsp EDF produces its electricity primarily from nuclear power plantsFrance is the world s largest user of nuclear power for electricity 78 of French production in 2007 In May 2004 the French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy reasserted in front of the French Parliament the primacy of nuclear power much to the relief of labour unions of EDF In this speech the minister re phrased the famous slogan We do not have oil but we have ideas by declaring We do not have oil we do not have gas we do not have coal but we had ideas Depleted uranium from reprocessing the spent fuel of the 58 French nuclear power plants were exported from Le Havre to Russia in the last years and stored in Seversk where it was enriched and the new fuel was exported back to France 33 In 2013 EDF acknowledged the difficulties it was having building the new EPR nuclear reactor design with its head of production and engineering Herve Machenaud saying EDF had lost its dominant international position in design and construction of nuclear power stations 34 In September 2015 EDF s chief executive Jean Bernard Levy stated that the design of a New Model EPR was being worked on which will be easier to build to be ready for orders from about 2020 35 needs update In 2016 EDF s chief executive Jean Bernard Levy stated that EDF s 2030 strategy increased the emphasis on renewable energy with a 2030 goal of doubling renewable energy capacity worldwide He stated I am convinced that we will still have a centralised and secure system in the future but it will be supplemented by a more intermittent and local decentralised system in which customers will take charge of their consumption In readiness for this we must press on with research into electricity storage and smart electricity systems 36 EDF spying conviction edit In 2011 a French court fined EDF 1 5m and jailed two senior employees for spying on Greenpeace including hacking into Greenpeace s computer systems Greenpeace was awarded 500 000 in damages 37 Although EDF claimed that a security firm had only been employed to monitor Greenpeace the court disagreed jailing the head and deputy head of EDF s nuclear security operation for three years each Two employees of the security firm Kargus run by a former member of France s secret services received sentences of three and two years respectively 38 39 Charges were mostly dismissed in appeal in 2013 DDoS attack on EDF site edit EDF s website was brought down by DDoS attacks three times in 2011 twice in April and once later in June 40 The attacks were claimed by the hacktivist group Anonymous Three men were later arrested and interviewed on charges of obstructing functionality of a data processing service fraudulent access of a data processing service and participation in an association formed with the aim of preparing such infractions 40 Motivations for the attack were thought to relate to the Fukushima nuclear accident in Japan 40 Unlike Switzerland and Germany which plan to close down all nuclear reactors at the end of their lifespan the government of France had no such plans to move away from nuclear power and three months after the Fukushima meltdown stated a budget increase for nuclear power 41 The downtime of the EDF website cost the company an estimated 162 000 42 Suing No Dash For Gas edit In February 2013 EDF Energy sought an estimated 5 million in damages from environmental activists from the No Dash for Gas campaign that occupied the EDF owned West Burton CCGT power station in October 2012 43 44 It is unusual in the UK for companies to seek damages from protesters 45 On 13 March 2013 EDF dropped their lawsuit against the protesters after agreeing a permanent injunction against protesters entering EDF sites 46 Absorption of Areva reactor business edit In 2017 EDF took over the majority of the reactor business of Areva excluding the fuel business in a French government sponsored restructuring following financial and technical problems at Areva due to the building of new EPR nuclear plants 6 7 8 The reactor business has been named Framatome In October 2019 French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire released an audit report on the construction of the heavily delayed and nearly four times over budget Flamanville 3 EPR development started by Areva in 2007 The Finance Minister demanded EDF present within a month an action plan for the project calling it a failure for the entire French nuclear industry 47 Effect of coronavirus pandemic edit In April 2020 EDF estimated the economic slowdown due to the coronavirus pandemic could potentially reduce electricity consumption in France by 20 EDF estimated annual nuclear output in France would be about 300 TWh in 2020 and 330 360 TWh in 2021 and 2022 down from a pre coronavirus estimate of 375 390 TWh Some nuclear reactors will likely be taken offline in the summer of 2020 needs update EDF announced it had withdrawn financial targets for 2020 and 2021 A delay of planned 10 year reactor upgrades this year may be necessary 48 49 To mitigate the impact EDF is targeting 500 million of cost savings to 2022 and aims to sell 3 billion of assets to 2022 50 2021 stress corrosion cracking crisis edit Main article Nuclear power in France Crisis since late 2021 In October 2021 stress corrosion cracking in stainless steel safety system piping was discovered eventually requiring rolling fleet wide shutdowns for inspections and repair during 2022 and 2023 This reduced electricity production in 2022 to 279 TWh 82 TWh less than expected with a continuing shortfall in 2023 To meet demand EDF had to buy electricity on the European market at high prices costing an estimated 29 billion to June 2023 51 In late May 2022 when 12 nuclear reactors were offline EDF increased the estimated earnings reductions for the inspections and repairs to 18 5 billion 52 53 2021 global energy crisis edit EDF had to sell a further 20 TWh of power to other domestic suppliers at a reduced price due to the government response to the 2021 global energy crisis 54 55 In January 2022 EDF calculated that the increase in reduced price wholesale supply would cost it 8 4 billion 7 billion and it withdrew its profit guidance The EDF share price fell considerably EDF s debt is about 41 billion and Fitch Ratings lowered EDF s credit rating 56 2022 Re nationalization edit On 6 July 2022 French prime minister Elisabeth Borne announced that the French government is aiming for a full nationalization of EDF 32 57 Borne vowed to limit the impact of the rise in energy prices through the state having full control over electricity production and performance Borne told parliament we must ensure our sovereignty in the face of the colossal challenges to come 58 Earlier in 2022 President Emmanuel Macron had suggested a renationalization of EDF as well as a big expansion of nuclear energy in the coming decades 59 however in 2021 he had to scrap an overhaul of EDF codenamed Project Hercules that would have placed EDF s profitable renewables sector in a new company due to opposition by unions and objections raised by the European Commission 60 In March 2023 EDF created the NUWARD subsidiary to design and manufacture a 170 MWe small modular reactor delivered as two units with an integrated primary loop for construction from 2030 61 Renewable energies editPlug in hybrids and V2G edit Further information Plug in hybrid and V2G EDF has developed recharging points for the Toyota Plug in HV in France 62 The French government has contributed 550 million to a partnership by Electricite de France with Renault Nissan and with PSA Peugeot Citroen 63 Photovoltaics edit In 2018 EDF had plans to invest up to 25 billion in photovoltaics solar power generation and introduce green electricity tariffs 64 Carbon Intensity edit year Production TWh Emission Mt CO2 kg CO2 MWh2002 650 91 35 1412003 669 96 34 1442004 647 95 74 1482005 647 93 52 1452006 655 93 35 1422007 706 101 91 1442008 704 103 79 1472009 652 88 09 135See also List of European power companies by carbon intensity Tidal farms edit Paimpol Brehat tidal farm 65 Competitors editAs of 2017 EDF still held the business of 85 5 of France s residential customers though on a slow downward trend 64 Main competitors edit Apart from foreign producers and distributors there are some significant competitors of EDF in France although their market share is weaker in comparison Engie the company formed after the merger of Gaz de France and Suez clearly intends to produce its own electricity has bought stake in the future EPR nuclear reactors and is poised to become the most credible competitor of EDF in the newly liberalised French electricity market SNET Societe nationale d electricite et de thermique This company is the successor of depleting coal companies and primarily produce thermal electricity 2 5 TWh Its capital 81 belonged predominantly to Collieries of France and with EDF A portion of the capital 30 was sold to Endesa the main Spanish electricity producer another portion of 35 was sold in 2004 As of 2008 Endesa holds 65 of the equity of the generating company Snet 66 CNR Compagnie nationale du Rhone the capital of which is predominantly public the company exploits 19 hydroelectric plants installed on the banks of the Rhone Its production of 19 TWh makes it the second largest French producer with 4 of the market CNR signed a partnership agreement with Electrabel SHEM Societe hydro electrique du Midi a subsidiary of SNCF of which produces about one third of the electricity used by SNCF A partnership agreement was signed with Electrabel Locally controlled or between local councils edit Among the other rivals of EDF one can count a number of municipally governed companies known under the generic term entreprises locales de distribution local businesses of distribution who are electricity producers exploiting EDF s network The nationalisation of electricity and gas on 8 April 1946 which profoundly changed the French electrical and gas organization had however acknowledged the right of villages to keep their role in the public distribution of electricity and gas In 1946 certain firms villages or groups of villages did not accept the proposal of nationalisation and created autonomous state controls who held the monopoly of distribution until 2004 in their area To note contrary to the initial idea local controllers of electricity have had since 1946 the choice to continue to produce electricity In fact their production was rather marginal except in Rhone Alpes having often preferred buying the majority of the electrical power from EDF With the recent opening of the electricity market local controllers are considering developing augmenting and diversifying their own production e g Ouest Energie the subsidiary company of SIEDS and or diversifying their sources of supply To date the number of local businesses of distribution is approximately 170 and holds 5 of the distribution of French electrical power in 2 500 villages Created by local authorities they serve about 3 million people and represent 7 000 jobs Around thirty of them 9 during creation in 1962 are federated in a national entity known as ANROC 67 Several departments are not therefore served entirely or partly by EDF for instance Deux Sevres supplied by SIEDS partnership between local councils of Electricity of Deux Sevres Vienne supplied by SIEEDV partnership between local councils of Electricity and Works of the Department of Vienne Charente Maritime supplied by SDEER partnership of Electricity and Rural Works of the Department of Charente Maritime Gironde supplied by Gironde Electricity However the company was sold to EDF at the beginning of 2000 because it could not financially maintain the damage of the severe weather of December 1999 on its network Alsace Rhone Alpes Security edit Enedis was one of the first companies to carry out preventive maintenance on these wooden poles with the aim of safeguarding the safety of its personnel in particular with the Polux tool which has become its reference standard 68 69 See also edit nbsp France portal nbsp Companies portal nbsp Energy portalDirigisme Energy in France Groupe INTRA List of French companies List of multinational corporationsReferences edit Nomination de Luc Remont en qualite de President Directeur General d EDF EDF FR 23 November 2022 a b c d e 2022 Annual Results PDF edf fr 17 February 2023 Retrieved 9 May 2023 Structure du capital www edf fr in French 29 December 2023 Retrieved 29 December 2023 As of 31 July 2023 2021 At a glance PDF edf fr Retrieved 15 May 2022 AFP August 2010 a b Areva outlines restructuring plan World Nuclear News 15 June 2016 Retrieved 25 June 2016 a b Green light for Areva restructuring Nuclear Engineering International 8 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2017 a b Janet Wood Caroline Peachey 21 March 2017 Nuclear cracks are beginning to show Nuclear Engineering International Retrieved 28 March 2017 France could close a third of its nuclear reactors says minister 10 July 2017 Retrieved 13 July 2017 Temple James Why France is eyeing nuclear power again MIT Technology Review Retrieved 8 November 2019 Rose Michel Hummel Tassilo 6 July 2022 France plans full nationalisation of power utility EDF Reuters Retrieved 6 July 2022 Activites EDF website Retrieved 11 November 2011 Agreement signed on EDF s acquisition of GE Steam Power s nuclear activities Nuclear Engineering International 8 November 2022 Retrieved 8 November 2022 Enedis Enedis website Retrieved 10 August 2016 De EDF GDF a Engie tout comprendre Engie website Retrieved 10 August 2016 EDF Pierre Gadonneix a son bureau avenue de Wagram Le Journal du Net Retrieved on 25 November 2010 Cependant le siege social se situe intra muros avenue de Wagram dans le 8e arrondissement EDF at a Glance EDF en Espagne a b Document de Reference PDF Paris EDF 2009 pp 33 34 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 11 November 2011 Tiersky Ronald 2004 Europe today National politics European integration and European security London Rowman amp Littlefield p 280 ISBN 9780742528055 Bennhold Katrin 21 November 2005 EDF shares fail to light up market International Herald Tribune Retrieved 11 July 2008 Shareholding policy Electricite de France 31 December 2007 Archived from the original on 9 July 2012 Retrieved 5 April 2009 France s nuclear energy champion is in turmoil The Economist 3 December 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2016 French become UK s biggest power distributor The Independent 20 November 2001 Electricite de France profits fall 74 on downturn 15 February 2011 Retrieved 11 November 2011 EDF sells shares in US utility Exelon Nuclear Engineering International 14 January 2013 Retrieved 26 January 2013 Stothard Michael 7 March 2016 EDF finance chief quits over decision to push on with Hinkley Point Financial Times Retrieved 7 March 2016 Macalister Terry 7 March 2016 Hinkley Point nuclear project in crisis as EDF finance director resigns The Guardian Retrieved 7 March 2016 Ward Andrew 8 March 2017 EDF shares hit record low after 4bn capital raise Financial Times Retrieved 14 March 2017 Trentmann Nina 14 June 2019 French Nuclear Power Producer EDF Plans a Turnaround The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 30 June 2019 EDF adjusts the cost of its nuclear fleet upgrades Nuclear Engineering International 3 November 2020 Retrieved 1 February 2021 a b France to renationalise EDF Nuclear Engineering International 11 July 2022 Retrieved 11 July 2022 Frankfurter Rundschau 13 October 2009 EDF eyes development of new smaller reactors papers Reuters 21 March 2013 Retrieved 18 April 2013 Geert De Clercq 23 September 2015 Only China wants to invest in Britain s new 2bn Hinkley Point nuclear station because no one else thinks it will work EDF admits The Independent Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Retrieved 24 September 2015 Interview Jean Bernard Levy CEO EDF Our Future Lies in Combination Nuclear and Renewables the energycollective 18 October 2016 Retrieved 7 November 2016 Black Richard 10 November 2011 EDF fined for spying on Greenpeace nuclear campaign BBC Retrieved 11 November 2011 Gersmann Hanna 10 November 2011 EDF fined 1 5m for spying on Greenpeace The Guardian Retrieved 11 November 2011 Samuel Henry 10 November 2011 EDF found guilty of spying on Greenpeace France The Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 November 2011 a b c Balsan Duverneuil Nathalie 26 January 2012 Un Anonymous a ete arrete dans le departement Midi Libre Retrieved 15 February 2013 Levitan Dave 27 June 2011 France Doubles Down on Nuclear Power IEEE Spectrum Retrieved 15 February 2013 Gueguen Elodie 26 January 2012 Des Anonymous en garde a vue France Info Retrieved 15 February 2013 Garvin Daniel 21 February 2013 How to occupy a power station exclusive footage of No Dash For Gas as they prepare to shut down the West Burton plant video The Guardian Retrieved 1 March 2013 Environmental activists No Dash For Gas occupied two 300ft chimneys at the EDF owned gas fired power station in West Burton Nottinghamshire in November 2012 Exclusive footage shows the group s meticulous preparation for the action They closed the facility for eight days the longest occupation of a power plant in the UK Protesters reject government plans to invest heavily in new gas power stations and instead call for massive investment in renewables Press release EDF suing climate activists for 5 million protesters face losing homes No Dash for Gas 20 February 2013 Archived from the original on 23 April 2013 Retrieved 27 February 2013 Following the week long shut down and occupation of EDF s West Burton gas fired power station last October by campaign group No Dash for Gas EDF has launched a civil claim for damages against the group and associated activists for costs the company claims to have incurred a figure it puts at 5 million Ball James 20 February 2013 Activists claim police siding with power company EDF in lawsuit The Guardian Retrieved 27 February 2013 The action includes an injunction barring those named from the site but in an unusual move in the UK also has a provision to recover damages interest and court costs from the activists John Sauven the executive director of Greenpeace EDF s lawsuit represents the opening of a new front against peaceful protest Ball James 13 March 2013 EDF drops lawsuit against environmental activists after backlash The Guardian Retrieved 14 March 2013 Minister calls for EDF to revive French nuclear industry World Nuclear News 29 October 2019 Retrieved 1 November 2019 EDF lowers annual output forecast to 300 TWh World Nuclear News 16 April 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Felix Bate 16 April 2020 French utility EDF expects steep drop in domestic nuclear output to record low in 2020 Reuters Retrieved 22 April 2020 EDF counts the cost of coronavirus to new build projects World Nuclear News 30 July 2020 Retrieved 31 July 2020 MacLachlan Ann 5 July 2023 Dealing with cracking in the French nuclear fleet Nuclear Engineering International Retrieved 13 July 2023 French regulator gives update on corrosion issue World Nuclear News 18 May 2022 Retrieved 19 May 2022 EDF revises up cost of nuclear power plant outages World Nuclear News 19 May 2022 Retrieved 19 May 2022 Evans Pritchard Ambrose 18 January 2022 France s nuclear meltdown has big implications for Britain The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 19 January 2022 Mallet Benjamin Crellin Forrest 16 December 2021 EDF shares plunge after faults found at French nuclear power reactor Reuters Retrieved 19 January 2022 Yeomans Jon 23 January 2022 Emmanuel Macron hammers EDF as Britain s nuclear energy future hangs in the balance The Sunday Times London Retrieved 23 January 2022 France s EDF to be fully nationalized prime minister says CNBC 6 July 2022 Retrieved 8 July 2022 Chrisafis Angelique 6 July 2022 New French PM vows to nationalise EDF and tackle cost of living crisis The Guardian Paris Retrieved 8 July 2022 France to nationalise EDF search under way for new boss World Nuclear News 7 July 2022 Retrieved 8 July 2022 Mallet Benjamin 20 June 2022 Macron s election setback complicates plans to revamp EDF Reuters Retrieved 8 July 2022 SMR shortlist explored Nuclear Engineering International 14 December 2023 Retrieved 14 December 2023 EDF et Toyota annoncent un partenariat technologique en Europe relatif aux vehicules hybrides rechargeables Nastu Paul 13 October 2008 French President Gives EVs Hybrids Green Light Environmental Leader Retrieved 30 March 2017 a b Cat Rutter Pooley 16 February 2018 EDF revenues slip as nuclear pressures bite Financial Times Retrieved 16 February 2018 Paimpol Brehat Tidal Demonstration Project Tethys 25 July 2019 Retrieved 12 November 2019 source ANROC Association Nationale des Regies de services publics et des Organismes constitues par les Collectivites locales ou avec leur participation Archived from the original on 23 October 2005 Retrieved 9 July 2005 CBT le controle non destructif du bois au service de son usage efficient www leboisinternational com in French 7 June 2022 Retrieved 3 October 2023 Intervention JP HIPPIAS RS CNSHSCT UES Orange conference de presse dangerosite poteaux bois le 24 mars 2017 a Valence PDF External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Electricite de France Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electricite de France amp oldid 1211485639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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