Energy company EDF approves divisive UK nuclear power plant


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PARIS (AP) — French energy company EDF Thursday gave the green light to a major nuclear power plant project in southwest England that some consider too costly, including one board member who announced his resignation.

As the company's board met throughout the day, unions argued that the 24-billion-euro ($27 billion) cost of the Hinkley Point project could put the company at risk. They even took legal action to try to delay the project.

Environmental activists oppose the project at a time when some countries, like Germany, are moving away from nuclear energy.

In a surprise move, the British government said it would take time to consider the project, rather than giving it the green light immediately.

Business and Energy Secretary Greg Clark said nuclear energy was "an important part of the mix" for the U.K.'s energy supply.

"The government will now consider carefully all the component parts of this project and make its decision in the early autumn," said Clark, who took office this month in the new government of Prime Minister Theresa May.

EDF is majority-owned by the French government, which supports the project. The two reactors could ultimately produce 7 percent of British electricity and create 25,000 jobs, according to EDF.

One board member resigned Thursday to express disapproval of the project to build the reactors 165 miles (265 kms) west of London.

Gerard Magnin, who was among six people representing the French state on the EDF board, wrote in a letter seen by The AP: "I don't want to endorse any longer a strategy that I don't share."

EDF did not immediately comment on Magnin's resignation.

In March, one of EDF's senior vice presidents resigned. French media reported that Thomas Piquemal quit over concerns about the financing of the nuclear power plant.

John Sauven, executive director at Greenpeace, urged the British government not to sign the deal.

EDF "can barely hold itself together," he said in a statement. "Major figures are quitting in dissent, the company's employees are up in arms and a similar reactor being built in France is under investigation by the French nuclear regulator."

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Danica Kirka and Jill Lawless in London contributed to this report.

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