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Jellyfish force French nuclear plant shutdown

The Gravelines nuclear plant is fully shut after the incident
The Gravelines nuclear plant is fully shut after the incident

A nuclear plant in northern France was temporarily shut down after a swarm of jellyfish clogged pumps used to cool the reactors, energy group EDF has said.

The automatic shutdowns of four units "had no impact on the safety of the facilities, the safety of personnel, or the environment", EDF said on its website.

"These shutdowns are the result of the massive and unpredictable presence of jellyfish in the filter drums of the pumping stations," the operator of the Gravelines nuclear plant said.

The plant is fully shut after the incident, with its two other units already offline for maintenance.

Three of the production units automatically shut down late yesterday evening, followed by a fourth early this morning, said EDF.

A sign outside the Gravelines nuclear power station, operated by Electricite de France SA (EDF), during a visit by Bruno Le Maire, France's finance minister, in Dunkirk, France, on Monday, Jan. 15, 2024. Le Maire will travel to EDF's nuclear plant in Gravelines, in the north of France, and the nearb
Two new reactors are due to open at Gravelines by 2040

"The plant's teams are mobilised and are currently carrying out the necessary diagnostics and interventions to restart the production units in complete safety," EDF said.

Gravelines is Western Europe's largest nuclear power plant with six reactors, each with the capacity to produce 900 megawatts.

The plant is due to open two next-generation reactors, each with a capacity of 1,600 megawatts, by 2040.