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Home International Customs

French EDF keen on hydro, renewable projects in Turkey

byCT Report
13/10/2016
in International Customs
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ISTANBUL: French energy giant EDF Group is “very interested” in the Turkish market, and in getting involved in hydro energy projects as well as further developing its activities in renewables, Simone Rossi, the group’s senior executive vice president in charge of the international division, said. “Turkey has an important energy agenda highlighting the security and affordability of supply,” Rossi said in an interview on the sidelines of the World Energy Congress of which Anadolu Agency is the global communication partner for 2016.

“The possibility of rising demand, the size of the population, the growth of the economy and the desire of the country to become more independent in energy supplies keeps us interested in Turkey,” Rossi said. Based in Paris and largely owned by the French state, EDF has operations in Europe, South America, North America, Asia, the Middle East and Africa. “There is definitely more room for nuclear, renewable and hydro energy projects in Turkey,” Rossi said. “This will allow the country to become more independent and in control of its energy supply.”

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EDF Energies Nouvelles, the group’s renewable energy arm, holds a 45 percent stake in Turkey’s Polat Enerji, one of the principal developers of Turkey’s wind energy market. Polat Enerji has an installed gross capacity of 630 megawatts (MW) and 510 MW of net capacity in wind power, according to its website. EDF would like to invest more in renewables in Turkey as well as advance its existing operations, according to Rossi. The company has also been looking into a number of hydro energy projects in the last few years and will invest when it finds the right opportunity, he said.

The company remained “very happy” with its partnership with Polat as it “symbolized” EDF’s way of doing business outside of France, Rossi said. “The partnership is a fusion of local knowledge and our global technology and it produces very good results,” he said.

EDF also supported Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in the Sinop nuclear power plant in Turkey “in the global framework of their partnership with them,” Rossi emphasized. “As a technology provider, Mitsubishi seeks the strength of a nuclear operator to support the introduction of this project in Turkey,” Rossi said.“EDF is an experienced nuclear operator that can help them in this aspect,” he added. A consortium comprising Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Itochu Corp and France’s GDF Suez are building the Sinop nuclear power plant in northern Turkey. The 4,800 MW plant is planned to be operational by 2023.

Tags: French EDF keen on hydrorenewable projects in Turkey

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