Areva Confirms to Change Management Structure

May 20, 2014

State-owned French nuclear power engineering group Areva confirmed on Tuesday that it would change its governance structure after pressure from its main shareholders, the state and the French Atomic Energy Commission.



The move creates a single board of directors, replacing a two tier structure where an executive board is overseen by a supervisory board.
 


"The objective of this reform is to provide better support to the general management team, with a clear sharing of roles and more collaboration between the board of directors and general management," Areva Supervisory Board Chairman Pierre Blayau said.



Blayau is set to become chairman of the board, while Luc Oursel, currently head of the executive board, could become chief executive, according to a report in Les Echos newspaper last week.



French Economy Minister Arnaud Montebourg said earlier this month that the change would allow the state shareholders to better control the firm and make important decisions on the board, be it about the firm's uranium mining activities, alliances, purchases or divestments.



The planned change in governance follows a scathingly critical report by the top public auditor of Areva's management under Areva Chief Executive Luc Oursel's predecessor Anne Lauvergeon.

 

(Reporting by James Regan; Editing by Andrew Callus)

Logistics News

DNV Verifies Lifting System for Immersed Tunnel

DNV Verifies Lifting System for Immersed Tunnel

AD Ports Group Enhances Al Faya Dry Port’s Integration with the Global Trade and Logistics Ecosystem

AD Ports Group Enhances Al Faya Dry Port’s Integration with the Global Trade and Logistics Ecosystem

Schipper Takes the Helm of Netherlands Coast Guard

Schipper Takes the Helm of Netherlands Coast Guard

Marlink Provides Connectivity for TUI Cruises’ New Mein Schiff Flow

Marlink Provides Connectivity for TUI Cruises’ New Mein Schiff Flow

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Waymo recalls almost 3,900 robotaxis due to the risk of them entering construction zones that are closed.
Senator calls on FAA to refuse White House pressure and approve Trump arch
Azov fighters from Ukraine were expelled from Mariupol. Now, they are retaliating