When
France launched its next generation nuclear reactor a few years back, French
leaders were proudly touting their EPR project in glowing terms, claiming it
heralded energy independence and the end of worries about global warming. This
is what President Nicolas Sarkozy had to say in 2009:
… ladies and gentlemen
presidents of EDF, Areva, Bouygues, Alstom, ladies and gentlemen. Since I have
been president of the République I
have wanted to come here, to Flamanville, to see the biggest construction site
in Europe. Now I have come, and I regret that I didn’t come sooner. Flamanville,
it’s a site that the whole world looks up to. It is the model for the world of
the nuclear renaissance. Renaissance… The analogy with that glorious period of
European history will undoubtedly provoke a few debates, but there are some
points in common with the Renaissance: the questioning of old ways of thinking,
the questioning of irrational fears, the faith in science, and the faith in
technology which were the elements of the Renaissance. It is up to us to ensure
that this rediscovery of nuclear energy will be an opportunity for the progress
and cooperation for all humanity. Flamanville is a model suite for the third
generation of nuclear technology. Flamanville is a facet of French excellence,
technological excellence, industrial excellence—and “industry” is not a dirty
word, by the way—and environmental excellence.
Nicolas Sarkozy, 2009/02/06
quoted in Nicolas Lambert, Avenir Radieux (Editions L’Echappée, 2012)
Well,
that was then and this is now. This month even the mainstream media didn’t
ignore the bad news out of France, probably because it was disastrous financial
news that the global financial industry needed to know. Several reports have
appeared like the
one in The Wall Street Journal
that outlined the sad tale of hubris, lost opportunities, and bad management
that has left France’s nuclear industry battered, bruised and down for the
count, perhaps to never again rise to its previous stature.
Areva,
the company building the EPR, announced last year that it was failing
financially because of the downturn in the uranium market since Fukushima, cost
overruns and delays on EPR projects, and acquisitions gone bad. This month, Areva
announced there was flawed steel in a crucial part of the nuclear reactor it is
building in Flamanville, northern France. The regulator has shut down the
project until further notice. Since the major parts have already been
installed, serious questions are being raised about the viability of
dismantling and starting over. A
report in The Ecologist noted:
One problem is the
pressure vessel's sheer size and the fact that it was already in place when the
fault was detected. The vessel weighs 410 tonnes and cannot now be removed, and
it is hard to see how it could be repaired or modified.
EPR
projects in China and Finland are sure to be halted until questions are cleared
up, and the UK is now wondering whether it should back out of a plan to have
Areva build four EPRs there.
It
is tragic to see France repeat its mistakes of the past with this pathetic replay
of hubris and downfall involving grand plans for the next great thing in
nuclear energy. This tale of the EPR looks too much like the history of
the Superphénix breeder reactor that gave the nation twenty years of grief
before it was finally shut down in 1996—and it is still undergoing its long dismantling
process.
Nicolas
Sarkozy has been out of power for a while, but lately he has been trying to
resurrect himself. It remains to be seen whether he will grasp for some way to
keep spinning the EPR as a glorious French achievement, trying to convince
investors and the public that their doubts are just irrational fears lingering
from the Middle Ages.
Sources:
Paul Brown and Oliver Tickell, “Nuclear
reactor flaws raise Hinkley C safety fears,” The Ecologist, April 14, 2015.
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