Nuclear power: Engie CEO criticises Arizona ambitions to extend Doel and Tihange lifespan

Nuclear power: Engie CEO criticises Arizona ambitions to extend Doel and Tihange lifespan
Protesters during an action from Standup4nuclear in January 2023 in Tihange. Credit: Belga/ Didier Defoe

Negotiators for the new federal government can kiss goodbye their plans to extend additional nuclear reactors or keep Doel 4 and Tihange 3 running for another 20 years. In a frustrated communication on Friday, Engie Belgium's managing director Vincent Verbeke branded the plans “unthinkable today.”

The work Engie must carry out on Belgium's nuclear sites is already “colossal”, Verbeke stressed. He points in particular to the dismantling of nuclear power plants that have already been shut down, work to secure the reactors that are due to close in 2025 and above all, the extension of Doel 4 and Tihange 3 until 2035.

It is therefore simply unthinkable to plan to keep Tihange 1 open any longer, insists the head of Engie Belgium. “We're concentrating on what we've agreed, in particular the ten-year extension. This already represents a gigantic amount of work.”

Furthermore, nuclear power is no longer part of Engie's “strategic ambition”, Verbeke says. The French energy giant is focusing more on renewable energies and flexibility. “We are no longer investing in nuclear power,” adds the CEO.

Plans to extend Doel 4 and Tihange 3 for a further ten years also appear to have fallen on deaf ears for the time being. “A 20-year extension is a different project. It doesn't exist.” Verbeke reiterated that nuclear power is too expensive and the cheapest option is to invest in renewable energies.

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