<a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/emmanuel-macron/" target="_blank">French President Emmanuel Macron </a>said there was no reason to panic about possible power cuts this winter, but called on citizens to use less energy. In an interview with French TV, Mr Macron denied that the risk of rolling blackouts was due to inadequate management of the country's nuclear reactor restart programme. "First of all, let us be clear: no panic! It is legitimate for the government to prepare for the extreme cases which would mean cutting off electricity for a few hours per day if we did not have enough power," he said. Mr Macron made the comments during a visit to New Orleans in the US, where he met with <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/us-news/2022/12/01/bidens-welcome-frances-emmanuel-macron-and-wife-to-washington/" target="_blank">US President Joe Biden</a> and also had a face-to-face discussion with Twitter boss Elon Musk. EDF, the country's state utility provider, has faced an unprecedented number of outages at its fleet of nuclear reactors following repair work, reducing nuclear output to a 30-year low just as Europe scrambles to replace Russian gas supplies, which Moscow cut off in retaliation for EU sanctions imposed over its invasion of Ukraine. The head of French power grid operator RTE said on Thursday that <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/europe/2022/12/02/cold-spell-could-lead-to-french-power-cuts-next-week/" target="_blank">France may face "some days" of power cuts this winter</a> and the government has started briefing local authorities on how to handle any outages. "These are fictitious scenarios, but if all of us adhere to the sobriety plan presented by the prime minister a few months ago, and notably reduce our consumption by 10 pct compared to normal levels ... and if EDF continues its work...then yes we can get through this period, even if the months of December and January turn out to be cold," Mr Macron said. French media have run stories about how to prepare for blackouts, suggesting buying candles, leaving fridges and freezers shut and charging up mobile phones. Analysts say that cold weather could lead to power cuts as soon as early as Monday, as delays to the restart of the nuclear reactors have left supply lagging demand. RTE's online power availability forecasting tool Ecowatt on Saturday showed no warnings of possible tension on the French power grids for the four days ahead to Tuesday.