2/16/2012
AREVA is striving to constantly anticipate customer needs and adapt our solutions to help our customers build and maintain a low-carbon energy portfolio with the right mix of innovative nuclear and renewable technologies.
Field Report: Discover pragmatic examples of customer benefits
24 hours in La Hague
EFECT 2012 - Kenneth Sloane, Dominion
Alternatives #27: Nuclear and renewables: complementary energies
Rapport environnemental social et sociétal de COMURHEX Malvési 2011 [FR]
The EPR™ reactor key assets
Rapport environnemental social et sociétal de COMURHEX Malvési 2010 [FR]
"Flamanville 3 Project" (EDF)
The Chalon Saint-Marcel plant guided tour
OFFER / RECYCLING
March 19, 2010

Working in collaboration with TNS Sofres, AREVA has conducted a survey in seven countries to gain a clearer understanding of perceptions about spent nuclear fuel.
The results reinforce AREVA offers and solutions for nuclear spent fuel management.
France, UK, Italy, Germany, Spain, Belgium and the USA: the countries taking part in this survey were very carefully selected. All have different experiences and outlooks in terms of nuclear energy. Rather than question too large or too diverse a sample, AREVA decided to target opinion-formers in two categories:
TNS Sofres study: what 7 countries think about used nuclear fuel
The first International Nuclear Recycling Day was held on February 18, 2010 in Paris. This was the backdrop for polling institute TNS Sofres to exclusively present the results of this major survey it conducted in France, Europe and worldwide on public perceptions of used nuclear fuel.
Three clear messages emerge from the outcome of this survey.
• The fate of spent nuclear fuels remains the Achilles heel of industry growth. Although the majority of those interviewed in all the countries surveyed were in favor of using nuclear energy to generate electricity, the fate of spent nuclear fuel is a cause for global concern, and is seen as holding back the potential development of the industry.
• The opinion-formers interviewed also felt that the authorities had not fully grasped the challenges posed by spent nuclear fuels. They demand immediate action, with the emphasis on placing greater trust in the industry itself.
• The “well-informed” group is more in favor of recycling. The arguments presented in favor of recycling – a 25% saving of uranium, the reduced volume and toxicity of nuclear waste and the ability to recover energy – were interpreted by this group as unexploited potential, and even strengthened the feeling amongst 78% of French respondents and 87% of UK and American respondents that nuclear energy is a solution of the future.
The recycling business consists of extracting of fresh energy resources using spent nuclear fuels.