Framatome

Framatome
FormerlyAreva NP
IndustryNuclear power
Founded1958 (1958)
HeadquartersLa Défense, Courbevoie, France
Number of locations
58
Area served
France, US, China, Germany, United Kingdom
Key people
Bernard Fontana
OwnerEDF (80,5 %)
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (19,5 %).
Number of employees
18000+
Subsidiaries
  • Framatome Inc.
  • Framatome GmbH
  • Framatome Ltd
  • Edvance
  • Corys
  • Intercontrôle
  • Foxguard Solutions
Websitewww.framatome.com

Framatome (French pronunciation: [fʁamatɔm]) is a French nuclear reactor business.[1] It is owned by Électricité de France (EDF) (80.5%) and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (19.5%).

The company first formed in 1958 to license Westinghouse's pressurized water reactor (PWR) designs for use in France. Similar agreements had been put in place with other European countries, and this led to a 1962 contract for a complete plant at Chooz. Westinghouse sold its stake to engineering firm Creusot-Loire in 1976, and the company became solely French owned.

In 2001, Siemens sold its reactor business to Framatome. As part of a larger series of mergers with Cogema and Technicatome, Framatome became the Areva NP division of the new Areva. It changed its name back to Framatome in 2018 after a major investment by utility operator EDF.[2]

While originally a licensing and construction business, today Framatome supplies the entire reactor life-cycle, including design of the European Pressurized Reactor (EPR), construction, fuel management and many related tasks.

  1. ^ "New NP resurrects Framatome name". World-Nuclear-News.org. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  2. ^ "New NP resurrects Framatome name". 4 January 2018.

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