Greenpeace activists target EDF Paris HQ in anti-nuclear protest

PARIS (Reuters) - Greenpeace activists blocked access to the Paris headquarters of French power utility EDF on Wednesday in a protest against the company's nuclear activities. Some 30 activists of the environmental organisation scaled the front of the building close to the Champs Elysees and unfurled a banner with a picture of EDF Chief Executive Jean-Bernard Levy. Others sat at the entrance to the building, their hands linked through large oil barrels painted yellow and plastered with radioactive warning stickers. The banner stated EDF was 74 billion euros ($79 billion) in debt, which would continue if it pursued its nuclear policy. EDF said it would file a complaint against Greenpeace over the action at its headquarters, which it described as a "violent aggression". French state-controlled utility EDF, is the world's single biggest nuclear power operator. It manages 58 French reactors that provide over 75 percent of electricity in the country. Greenpeace said EDF had not been honest with taxpayers about indebtedness caused by the soaring cost of maintaining its nuclear fleet, and what its says is the company's unwillingness to plan for a nuclear-free France. "The situation of EDF is absurd and those responsible for this are the managers with Jean-Bernard Levy leading," Cyrille Cormier, Greenpeace energy campaigner, said. (Reporting by Bate Felix, Benjamin Mallet and Jacky Naegelen; editing by Susan Thomas)