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French nuclear regulator settling safety evaluation of Flamanville plant

France's nuclear regulator is finalising its security evaluation of EDF's Flamanville nuclear power plant and will quickly start a public consultation process that will last a minimum of two weeks, it said in a statement sent to on Tuesday.

The company's announcement efficiently confirms a further hold-up to the Flamanville reactor, which was initially arranged to get in service in 2012.

EDF had stated it would start fuel packing this month in the past connecting it to the grid in mid-2024.

The company decreased to discuss the latest delay.

Repetitive delays have sent out costs for the job, initially estimated at 3 billion euros ($ 3.25 billion) when it was announced in 2004, soaring to an approximated 13.2 billion euros by the end of 2022.

EDF needs authorisation from the French Nuclear Security Authority (ASN) before it can start fuel loading, the ASN added.

In a separate declaration launched by the firm, it stated it was asking EDF to carry out an evaluation of its previous supervision of producing activities for equipment meant for its nuclear reactors.

It stated previously this year that it had discovered 43 cases of fraud in the nuclear sector throughout 2023, including irregularities at suppliers of equipment for the Flamanville reactor.

(source: Reuters)