From Baucaire to the Camargue, opponents of a very high voltage line project intended to decarbonize Fos-sur-Mer are taking to the front

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Electricity transmission network technicians work on a high voltage line, in Aix-en-Provence (Bouches-du-Rhône), in 2017. BORIS HORVAT / AFP

Despite the downpours which fell on Sunday April 28 on the , they reached the Château Mourgues du Grès by the dozens. With their Young Farmers banners, drawings made by the hands of children, or posters displaying a skull, nearly 300 people are participating in the rally against a project for a very high voltage 400,000 volt overhead power line. The wine estate, located in Beaucaire (Gard), is one of the many agricultural properties which could see imposing electricity pylons 50 meters high appear on its plots. Although the public consultation ended on April 7, mobilization on site is strengthening. An online petition already has 25,000 signatures.

To achieve the objectives set by the State to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 35% by 2030 and fuel the major announced projects for the production of hydrogen (H2V), low-carbon iron (GravitHy) or of solar panels (Carbon), the industrial-port zone of Fos-sur-Mer (Bouches-du-Rhône), which produces nearly 20 million tonnes of CO2 per year and counts in its ranks, with the ArcelorMittal steel site, the French champion in annual emissions (6.4 million tonnes), will have to significantly increase its electrical capacity. This industrial change promises the creation of several thousand new jobs. But it also ultimately implies a doubling of the current electricity consumption in the area.

To meet this demand, the Electricity Transmission Network (RTE) manager is therefore planning the installation and commissioning, by 2028, of a new very high voltage overhead power line of 400,000 volts, which would leave Jonquières-Saint-Vincent (Gard) to reach Fos-sur-Mer. This infrastructure would cross the Camargue regional natural park, that of the Alpilles, and the Crau plain, classified Natura 2000. The project, which provides for 180 pylons, each supporting around twenty cables, is estimated at 300 million euros; it should make it possible to transport electricity produced by power plants in the Rhône valley to Fos-sur-Mer.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers Fos-sur-Mer, giant laboratory of mutations of carbon civilization

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Two routes are still under study. Whatever the final route chosen on June 28, it will have an impact on the landscapes of the two departments concerned. “We have nothing to gain, but everything to loseprotests Juan Martinez, the mayor (Socialist Party) of Bellegarde (Gard) and president of the Terre d’Argence community of communes. We are the big losers! Our agriculture and tourism will be strongly impacted, our land devalued, our activity affected and our landscape scarred. »

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