
Nearly 1,000 people, employees of EDF or industrial partners, work all year round on the Chooz site They work in fields such as safety, operation, maintenance, engineering, environment, etc.
From 1967 to 1991, EDF, in partnership with Belgium, operated a first unit, Chooz A. With a capacity of 305 megawatts, it is the first pressurized water reactor in France. Since 2007, this unit has been undergoing deconstruction.
The Public Information Centre welcomes you free of charge and without appointment to help you discover nuclear energy.
It is open:
- outside school periods: only on Wednesdays from 1.30 pm to 5.30 pm
- during the French and Belgian school holidays: from Monday to Friday from 1.30 pm to 5.30 pm.
Closed on weekends.
Occasional openings during weekends of entertainment
The visit of the 300m² theme spaces includes stands on:
- the different means of electricity production
- the nuclear fission reaction and the uranium pellet manufacturing process
- radioactivity
- the controlled area and nuclear safety
- environmental controls
- waste - the Chooz A power plant under deconstruction and its model
- the Chooz B plant in operation, its model of the reactor building and a full-scale fuel assembly
- The films "C'est pas sorcier ! shot in Chooz : the operating principle of a power plant, the energy mix and waste.
- - The power plant's public information center also has an edutainment escape-game on the theme of energy that is accessible from the age of 8.
Animation thématique spécifique
Atelier pour enfants
Conférences
Visite guidée
Aire de pique-nique
Parking
Parking autocar
Salle de projection
Salle de réunion
Tables de pique-nique
Accès handicapés
The Nuclear Centre of Electricity Production (NCEP) of Chooz is located at 10 kilometers from Givet and at 60 km from Charleville-Mézières and Namur in Belgium. Established on nearly 200 hectares in the heart of the Ardennes Regional Natural Park, there are two production units of 1450 MW each, type of pressurized water reactor of last generation. In 2020, the Chooz nuclear power plant produced 12.77 TWh which represents nearly 30% of the electricity consumption of the Grand-Est region.