France to merge Areva, EDF nuclear reactor businesses


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PARIS (AP) — French nuclear giants Areva and EDF will merge their reactor businesses in a joint venture controlled by EDF — a wide-ranging reshuffle of the country's state-owned atomic energy industry.

French President Francois Hollande's office announced the deal's broad outlines Wednesday, saying final details would be negotiated by the two companies within a month.

The French government, which controls over 80 percent of both companies, will inject new capital "of the necessary amount" in Areva as part of the deal.

The outcome is a major reversal for Areva, whose ex-CEO Anne Lauvergeon fought off attempts to marry her company and EDF for years.

Areva lost nearly 5 billion euros ($5.6 billion) last year after taking a massive loss on new reactor projects in France and Finland.

Both companies are run by CEOs who've been at the helm for less than a year - Areva by Philippe Knoche and EDF by Jean-Bernard Levy. Late last year Areva chairman Philippe Varin also took a board seat at EDF in a move widely seen as paving the way for closer ties between the long-time atomic rivals.

Last month Areva announced a 1-billion-euro cost-cutting plan, which included the removal of up to 6,000 jobs.

Only five years ago Areva was seen as a French success story, led by swashbuckling CEO Lauvergeon as it rode the wave of the so-called "nuclear renaissance."

The company's fortunes collapsed after a series of failures, including massive cost-overruns and technical failings with its new generation reactor; a disastrous investment in a Nigerien uranium mine; and the aftereffects of a global rejection of nuclear power after Japan's Fukushima reactor meltdown.

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Online: http://www.areva.com

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Associated Press Writer Sylvie Corbet contributed to this report.

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Follow Greg Keller on Twitter at https://twitter.com/Greg\_Keller

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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