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European Energy Markets
16JUL

EDF slips three reactor restarts to late July

2 min read
09:48UTC

EDF held Bugey 3, Golfech 2 and Chooz 2 offline through 14-16 July on the river-cooling limit and pushed their restarts out to 19, 22 and 25 July, past the exemption the last briefing flagged.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Three EDF reactors stay frozen past their own restart dates, keeping French nuclear short into the heat.

EDF kept Bugey 3 (900 MW), Golfech 2 (1,300 MW) and Chooz 2 (1,450 MW), 3.65 GW in all, offline through 14-16 July and slipped their restart dates to 19, 22 and 25 July 1. All three now fall past the 20 July Bugey heat exemption the desk flagged when the units first came down on 12 July . EDF is France's state-owned nuclear operator, Europe's largest, and these reactors sit on rivers whose water it uses for cooling.

French law caps the temperature of water discharged back into rivers at 28C to protect aquatic life, and in a heat dome the intake is already too warm to run a reactor at full load without breaching it. EDF is running a further seven units at reduced output under the same limit. No amount of demand can override the rule; the reactors stay down until the rivers cool or a temporary exemption is granted, and this time the exemption dates arrived after the restarts.

That matters because French nuclear normally sets the cheap leg of the Continental clearing price. With 3.65 GW frozen out and more curtailed, the fleet that usually exports into Germany is instead leaning on its own margin, which is what turns the cross-border spread erratic in the next event.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Nuclear power stations need river water to cool their reactors, and French rules say the water they discharge back into the river cannot go above 28 degrees Celsius, to protect fish and river life. This summer's heat has kept river temperatures high enough that EDF, the French nuclear operator, has had to keep three reactors switched off for longer than planned. Bugey, Golfech and Chooz together produce 3.65 gigawatts, enough to power millions of homes, and none will be back online before 19 July at the earliest.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

EDF's constraint is a fixed regulatory ceiling, the 28C threshold on river discharge temperature, applied to reactors sited on the Rhone (Bugey), Garonne (Golfech) and Meuse (Chooz) rather than the sea-cooled coastal fleet. A second heat dome forecast to peak 9-14 July means the rivers have had little time to cool between episodes, unlike the single heat spike behind the 30 June curtailment.

The exemption regime is discretionary and site-specific: Bugey secured a heat exemption once, but Golfech and Chooz have not, which is why the three restart dates are slipping by different amounts, 19, 22 and 25 July, rather than moving together.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The slip past the 20 July Bugey exemption window removes the one piece of regulatory relief EDF had already secured this cycle.

  • Risk

    A third heat dome before 25 July would find Golfech and Chooz still offline, compounding rather than resolving the outage.

First Reported In

Update #27 · TTF hits EUR 55; the arb won't confirm it

Euronews· 16 Jul 2026
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United States
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EDF
EDF
EDF slipped the Bugey 3, Golfech 2 and Chooz 2 restarts to 19, 22 and 25 July, pushing all three past the 20 July Bugey heat exemption, after river-cooling limits on the Rhone, Garonne and Meuse forced the cuts. The same thermal ceiling has capped the fleet in every major heatwave since 2003, and this cycle is no exception.
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German power desk
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EU carbon and storage regulators
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Equinor
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