Whereas EDF had received only 7,100 applications a year for such connections before 2008, by last December it was fielding 3,000 per day. "We didn't see it coming," French lawmaker Francois-Michel Gonnog told Bloomberg News. "What is in the pipeline this year is unimaginable. Farmers were being told they could put panels on hangars and get rid of their cows." The government cut the price support twice last year but was finally forced to impose a three-month suspension in December. Now costing 1 billion euros per year, the program does not expire until 2017 and has put the utility in trouble. EDF's stock declined 20 percent last year, compared to only a 3.7 percent decline for the rest of Europe's Stoxx 600 Utilities Index.
The utility is now 57 billion euros in debt. Plans to upgrade its aging fleet of 53 nuclear reactors — which provide 75 percent of France's electricity — have been thrown into doubt.
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