EDF makes £12.5bn bid for British Energy
French utility EDF has launched a £12.5bn agreed bid for nuclear operator British Energy, in a revamped offer to take control of Britain's nuclear power industry.
EDF will pay 774 pence a share for the country's biggest electricity producer, according to a statement today, 35% above British Energy's closing price on March 14, the last trading session before the Scotland-based utility said it may receive an offer. EDF has also proposed an alternative offer of 700 pence a share plus "one nuclear power note". The note changes in value with wholesale energy prices and power output levels from British Energy's existing nuclear stations. Centrica Plc, the UK's dominant energy supplier, is in talks to take a 25% stake in the acquired company.
The British government, which owns 35% of British Energy, accepted an earlier proposed offer from EDF but investors Invesco and M&G, which own around 22% of the company, rejected it as too low.
The deal ends months of wrangling over British Energy's future and gives Paris-based EDF control of eight British nuclear plant sites where it will build four reactors.
Recommended Reading

The all-new Electrical Review is here
Discover the all-new Electrical Review, built to deliver sharper news, deep dives and opinion on the UK’s electrification infrastructure sector today.

Why the UK’s EV charging market is entering its consolidation phase
UK EV charging is consolidating as operators face rising costs, grid delays, tough uptime rules and pressure to prove demand and reliability in 2026.

Mer completes UK fleet charging exit with management buyout
Mer has completed the divestment of its UK fleet charging business, Mer Fleet Services Ltd, following a management buyout.
