Leaders | Nuclear energy

The French exception

As the world turns back to nuclear power, it should heed the lessons from France

2CP51MJ The Electricite de France (EDF) nuclear power station of Cattenom near Thionville, Eastern France, is seen at night February 8, 2012. The consumption of electricity in France reached a new time high of 101,700 megawatts (MW) on Wednesday according to RTE (Electricity Transport Network) technicians as sub-freezing winter temperatures continue.  REUTERS/Vincent Kessler (FRANCE - Tags: ENERGY ENVIRONMENT)
Image: Alamy

IT WAS BRANDED the most expensive way to boil water. Not so long ago, many dismissed nuclear power as pricey and doomed, at least in the West. Yet today nuclear energy is crucial once again. In the short run, Europe’s ability to get through the winter energy crunch depends in part on whether France’s ageing fleet of nuclear reactors can be cranked up to operate nearer full capacity. And in the long run, investment and innovation in nuclear power appear to be part of the answer to both Vladimir Putin’s energy war and climate change: an almost carbon-free way to generate a steady and controllable flow of electricity to work alongside intermittent solar and wind generation.

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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The French exception”

The winter war

From the December 17th 2022 edition

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