retail industry

French retailer Leclerc warns it could cut hours to cope with energy shortage

Reuters

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French retailer Leclerc warns it could cut hours to cope with energy shortage

LECLERC. The logo of Leclerc is seen on shopping trolleys outside a Leclerc hypermarket in Reze near Nantes, France, April 29, 2020.

Stephane Mahe/Reuters

Leclerc is among the retailers bracing for the impact of 'a crisis scenario where Russia cuts gas supplies'

PARIS, France – The boss of Leclerc warned on Monday, July 25, that the supermarket chain, France’s largest food retailer, could reduce the opening hours of its stores as part of emergency measures to deal with the risk of power shortages linked to the war in Ukraine.

“For this winter we have a crisis scenario where Russia cuts gas supplies,” Michel-Edouard Leclerc told France Info radio.

Under that scenario, “we could close some stores during certain hours,” he said.

Michel-Edouard Leclerc heads Les Centres E. Leclerc, a cooperative association of about 600 retailers that competes against Carrefour and Casino.

Its low-price policy has helped it become France’s biggest food retailer by market share.

French President Emmanuel Macron said on July 14 he would soon submit an “energy restraint plan” that would ask all citizens to commit to a general “hunt for waste,” such as turning off lights when leaving offices.

France’s supermarket sector – acting through the Perifem federation – had agreed earlier this month on energy saving measures that would be implemented from October 15, Leclerc said.

The measures notably include switching off illuminated signs as soon as a shop closes and systematically reducing light intensity. Lighting of sales areas is to be reduced by half before the public arrives and by 30% during critical consumption periods.

Energy prices, which were already increasing before Russia sent troops into Ukraine at the end of February, have sharply risen since then, leading to the highest inflation in most major global economies in decades.

With about 17% of its supply coming from Russia, France is less dependent on Russian gas than some of its neighbors are.

But concerns about supply from Russia come as France grapples with already limited electricity generation due to unexpected maintenance at aging nuclear reactors, prompting concern over winter shortages. – Rappler.com

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