Regulatory News:

Between 00:30 and 04:30 on Sunday 15 January, Eurotunnel (Paris:GET) (LSE:GETS) held its 22nd annual binational safety exercise, BINAT 22. Emergency services from both Britain and France were mobilised: firefighters, paramedics, police.... The Lead Nation in this year's exercise was France.

A fullscale, real-time exercise, BINAT is run at least once each year to test the planning and preparedness of the French and British emergency services in the event of an accident underground in the Channel Tunnel. No other European infrastructure manager organises an exercise of this scale. Eurotunnel estimates that each BINAT exercise costs approximately ?200,000.

The 2012 edition simulated a fire on board a truck being carried on a Shuttle towards the UK, the controlled stop, the evacuation of the truck drivers, in just a few moments, and the operation of a SAFE station.

Since the autumn of 2011 the Channel Tunnel has been equipped with four underground fire fighting stations, known as SAFE stations. A major safety innovation, the SAFE stations are capable of detecting and pin-pointing a hot-spot on a Freight Shuttle and, once the shuttle is brought to a standstill, of dispersing a targeted water mist which limits fire propagation by preventing oxygen access and helps to extinguish it. This automated system in turn facilitates the access of firefighters. The SAFE stations are 870 metres long and are situated 28km and 42km from the UK portal in both running Tunnels.

The BINAT 22 exercise required the mobilisation of significant resources: 150 personnel from the different emergency services in the ULK and France, thirty volunteers, fifteen judges and observers, a Eurotunnel Freight Shuttle, 19 STTS (Service Tunnel Transportation System) vehicles, ....

Michel Boudoussier, Groupe Eurotunnel Deputy Chief Executive, responsible for the Channel Tunnel, stated, "Eurotunnel considers the safety of its customers, staff and the goods transported through the Channel Tunnel to be an absolute priority. The construction of the four SAFE stations, whose effectiveness has been demonstrated during this 22nd BINAT, is proof of our ability to innovate and of our desire to constantly improve the quality of our service."

Note to editors:

The Channel Tunnel and its Shuttles are equipped with more than 20,000 control points, detectors and alarms, which are monitored 24/7/365 days per year. This equipment, the existence of a service tunnel accessible every 375m and the introduction of the SAFE stations together make the Channel Tunnel, in the eyes of international experts, one of the safest transport systems in the world. Eurotunnel, nonetheless continues to prepare for the most extreme circumstances, notably in the context of the BINAT exercises.

Groupe Eurotunnel is quoted in Paris (Euronext Paris: Get) and in London (London Stock Exchange: GETS).

Groupe Eurotunnel
Media, + 44 (0) 1303 284491
press@eurotunnel.com
or
Investors
Michael Schuller, +44 (0) 1303 288749
Michael.schuller@eurotunnel.com