Jellyfish disrupt French nuclear power plant for second time in a month

There are four large reactor's at Paluel, France's second largest nuclear plant by energy output
- Published
A swarm of jellyfish has caused major disruption at one of France's largest nuclear power plants, for the second time in a month.
The jellyfish entered the filters of the pumping station and the Paluel nuclear plant, France's national energy firm EDF said.
The incident reduced output at the plant in Normandy by 2.4 gigawatts and crews are working to restore it to full operation.
In August, generation at another major nuclear site in France was also disrupted by jellyfish, after a "massive and unpredictable" swarm forced the Gravelines plant to temporarily cease operations.
The hit represents a near halving of Paluel's 5.2 gigawatt output, after one of its four reactors was shut down and a second was reduced as a protective measure.
Nuclear makes up about 70% of Frances' energy consumption, according to the World Nuclear Association (WNA).
Paluel is one of France's largest nuclear power plants, with each of its four units generating over 1,300 megawatts of power.
EDF said in a statement that they took the measures at 21:00 local time (19:00 GMT) after the "arrival of jellyfish" in the filters of the non-nuclear part of the plant.
The company added that its teams were "carrying out the necessary diagnostics and interventions" to get both reactors fully back online.