William Molinié / Photo credit: MUSTAFA YALCIN / ANADOLU / ANADOLU VIA AFP 6:25 a.m., February 29, 2024

This Thursday, February 29, Sébastien Lecornu, Minister of the Armed Forces, goes to the Eurenco site in Bergerac, in Dordogne.

The French industrialist produces explosives and artillery ammunition powders, which represents a strategic issue for France.

The production of explosive powder will therefore be relocated to the national territory.

Military experts estimate that Ukrainian gunners have eight times less ammunition than Russian gunners.

In addition to the difficulty Westerners have in producing and delivering these munitions, explosive powder is also lacking.

The Minister of the Armed Forces, Sébastien Lecornu, is traveling this Thursday to Bergerac, in Dordogne, to the Eurenco site.

The French industrialist produces explosives and artillery ammunition powders.

A strategic issue for France.

Dangerous and highly explosive substances

Powder production will be relocated to the region.

Until now, it had to be transported from Sweden or purchased from Italian, German or Swiss suppliers.

The French industrialist Eurenco has invested 60 million euros on its Bergerac site and a new factory will be operational at the beginning of next year.

Each year, 1,200 tonnes of propellant powder should leave the factory, which would allow, on paper, the Caesar cannons to fire up to 80,000 155mm shells.

That is an autonomy of barely a fortnight on the front for the Ukrainians who, at the height of the war, fired up to 6,000 shells per day.

>> READ ALSO -

 Russian cyberattacks: strengthening security in the French armies

“We are only at the beginning of the rise of the munitions industry,” puts a diplomat into perspective.

“It’s going to take time,” he continues.

Especially since the renaissance of French gunpowder must take place within an optimal security framework.

It is an industry that handles very dangerous and highly explosive substances.

Transport and storage conditions are drastic.

In the summer of 2022, an explosion at the Eurenco site in Bergerac left eight people injured, including one seriously.