The EPR Project of Flamanville 3 - January 2011
This delay is linked to both structural and economic reasons. Flamanville 3 is the first nuclear power plant to be built in France for 15 years. It is also the first EPR.
In terms of industrial management, EDF has had to review its assessment of the extent of the work to be done, particularly in terms of civil engineering (iron reinforcements and anchor plates, much higher than initial estimates, etc.).
While considerable progress has been made in recent months (80% of the civil engineering work has been completed, a start has been made on assembling the piping and electrical equipment), there have been two serious accidents, one of which has meant that civil engineering work had to be suspended for weeks,
considerably slowing down progress for the first half of 2011.
As well as this, comprehensive analyses carried out as part of the post-Fukushima safety assessment audits will be submitted to the Nuclear Safety Authority in September.
Faced with these challenges, EDF has decided to introduce a new approach to organisation with its partners, including:
This updated project, worth now some 6 billion euros, will give EDF valuable feedback and a tried and tested approach to organisation for future EPR reactors, particularly in the United Kingdom.
"We are faced with the demands of a major site, and we have had to put together an appropriate industrial framework for us to succeed with this ambitious project. That is what has led us to introduce a new approach to the organisation of the site today" explained Hervé Machenaud, EDF's Group Senior Executive
in charge of Production and Engineering, Philippe Bonnave, Deputy CEO of Bouygues Construction.
"The success of the Flamanville EPR is a major challenge for the industrial expertise of the nuclear industry. We will continue to work together on the feedback from the first EPR sites in order to learn from it for the benefit of future construction projects around the world" announced Hervé Machenaud EDF's Group Senior Executive in charge of Production and Engineering and Claude Jaouen, Director of the Reactors and Services Unit at Areva.
EDF Group, one of the leaders in the energy market in Europe, is a comprehensive energy service provider with operations in every business, including energy generation, transport, distribution, trading and sales. The Group is the leading electricity producer in Europe. In France, it mainly has nuclear and hydraulic production facilities, with an electricity output that is 95% free of CO2 emissions. EDF's transport and distribution subsidiaries operate 1,285,000 km of low and medium voltage overhead and underground electricity lines and around 100,000 km of high and very high voltage networks. The Group is involved in supplying energy and services to more than 28 million customers in France.
The Group generated consolidated sales of €65.2 billion in 2010, of which 44.5% in France. EDF is listed on the Paris Stock Exchange and is a member of the CAC 40 index.
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