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Veolia to make its services energy self-sufficient in France

Veolia has announced to make its water and waste services in France energy self-sufficient within five years. One aspect will be the use of locally produced biogas.

Against a backdrop of high tensions in the energy markets, Veolia has announced the unprecedented plan to make

its water and waste services in France energy self-sufficient within five years, with 2 TWh (terawatt-hours) of locally

produced energy to cover the equivalent of its entire current consumption. This is equivalent to the consumption of

430,000 French households. This energy will be 100% local and 100% renewable.

The project is the continuation of a global-scale plan launched by the Group in March this year at Veolia’s own and

its customers’ installations, with the aim of reducing energy consumption by 5% and increasing energy production

by 5% in two years, with a 10% impact.

"This initiative will demonstrate the feasibility and relevance of the widespread use of green transformation

solutions to meet the challenges of energy sovereignty and decarbonization in France. Veolia already produces the

equivalent of ⅔ of the energy it consumes and will increase this momentum, alongside public authorities, to make

all of our services energy self-sufficient in 5 years thanks to new renewable and local energy projects," says

Estelle Brachlianoff, Veolia's Chief Executive Officer.

Local energy production

The main levers for increasing local alternative energy production deployed by Veolia in France are :

. the widespread production of biogas through the degradation of organic waste and the

methanization of sludge from wastewater treatment plants operated by Veolia

. increasing the production of electricity from non-recyclable waste at sites operated by the Group

(biomass, solid recovered fuels)

. the installation of photovoltaic panels on all Group sites that allow it, particularly on closed waste

storage sites

. increasing biofuel production from used food oils

This project complements the energy-saving measures adopted by Veolia in March to reduce its energy

consumption, such as :

. accelerating the deployment of flexible electricity solutions at facilities managed by the Group, thanks

to our expertise in intelligent energy management services

. optimizing the performance of the sites operated by Veolia through more than 60 Hubgrade digital

control centers worldwide

. identifying sources of waste energy that could be recovered, wherever possible;

. replacing the most energy-intensive equipment (particularly aeration systems at wastewater treatment

plants) and lowering heating set points.

Details

  • 93300 Aubervilliers, France
  • Veolia