French energy firm EDF will extend the life of four of its eight nuclear power plants in the UK.
The move will safeguard 2,000 jobs and help with tight energy supplies.
Heysham 1 and Hartlepool will have their life extended by five years until 2024, while Heysham 2 and Torness will see their closure dates pushed back by seven years to 2030.
Meanwhile, EDF said its 2015 profits fell 68% to €1.18bn mainly due to writedowns on coal-fired plants.
The results were below analysts' expectations.
The
value of plants in the UK, Italy, Poland and Belgium fell, and the
company also took charges on its Edison oil and gas exploration
business.
EDF will cut its dividend by 15 cents to €1.10 a share with an option for payment in new shares rather than cash.
Its shares have fallen almost 25% since the start of the year.
Nuclear extension
EDF said its decision to extend the life of its plants followed "extensive technical and safety reviews".
Chief
executive Vincent de Rivaz said: "Our continuing investment, our
expertise and the professional relationship we have with the safety
regulator means we can safely prolong the operating life of our nuclear
power stations.
"Their excellent output shows that reliability
is improving whilst their safety and environmental performance is higher
than ever."
The four nuclear plants employ about 2,000 permanent staff and 1,000 contractors.
They provide electricity to about a quarter of the UK's homes.
The
announcement comes amid concern about the amount of energy available to
keep the lights on, due to the closure of many of Britain's ageing
power plants.
Meanwhile, EDF has yet to finalise the investment for a new nuclear plant to be built at Hinkley Point in Somerset.
It
has agreed a deal in principle under which China General Nuclear Power
Corporation (CGN) will pay a third of the cost of the £18bn project in
exchange for a 33.5% stake.
An EDF board meeting to approve the
plan earlier this year is thought to have been postponed. Reports
suggested the company was struggling to find the cash for its 66.5%
stake.
The company said on Tuesday: "Hinkley Point C is a strong
project which is fully ready for a final investment decision and
successful construction. Final steps are well in hand to enable the full
construction phase to be launched very soon."
However, Paul
Dorfman of the UCL Energy Institute, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme:
"Unfortunately, with the best will in the world, it may just not
happen. Chris Bakken, the man charged by EDF to construct Hinkley Point,
has quit to spend more time with his family, EDF shares have crashed to
half their value a year ago; the budget for Hinkley alone is bigger
than EDF's entire market value.
"Areva - EDF's construction arm -
has been bankrupted by the huge costs and time overruns for the same
brand of reactor they want to build at Hinkley, so it seems there's a
good chance th
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