France's minister of the armed forces, Catherine Vautrin, said in an interview for Le Dauphiné Libéré that France can use the uranium and plutonium extracted from warheads dismantled after the end of the Cold War to support the increase of the French nuclear arsenal, announced by President Macron in his address on 2 March 2026. Catherine Vautrin was quoted as saying that:
Nous avons conservé les matières fissiles (uranium et plutonium) issues des têtes nucléaires démantelées après la guerre froide. À ce titre, nous disposons d'un stock totalement suffisant pour produire les nouvelles têtes nucléaires annoncées par Emmanuel Macron. Concernant le tritium qui, lui, ne peut pas être recyclé, le président a lancé un programme national dédié pour assurer notre approvisionnement.
The translation of the quote is below:
We have retained the fissile materials (uranium and plutonium) from the nuclear warheads dismantled after the Cold War. In this regard, we have a fully sufficient stockpile to produce the new nuclear warheads announced by Emmanuel Macron. As for tritium, which cannot be recycled, the President has launched a dedicated national programme to ensure our supply.
France is estimated to have about 6 tonnes of plutonium and about 25 tonnes of HEU that are available for weapons. These amounts far exceed what is required to maintain France's current arsenal of fewer than 300 warheads.
The size of the post-Cold War arsenal was first officially disclosed in 2008. In his address on 21 March 2008 in Cherbourg, then President of France Nicolas Sarkozy stated that
our arsenal will include fewer than 300 nuclear warheads. That is half of the maximum number of warheads we had during the Cold War.
The 300-warheads ceiling was then confirmed by President Hollande in 2015 and President Macron in 2020.
The 2008 announcement suggests that France can at least double the number of nuclear warheads in its arsenal, going back to the Cold War levels. It also appears to have enough material for a more significant increase. While the exact amounts of uranium and plutonium in French warheads are unknown, it may be estimated that 300 warheads contain about 1.2 tonnes of plutonium and about 5 tonnes of HEU out of 6 tonnes and 25 tonnes of the stock available for weapons respectively.
Unlike uranium and plutonium, the stock of tritium produced during the Cold War requires replenishment. In March 2024, France unveiled a program to produce tritium in the EDF civilian reactor in Civaux. In the past, tritium was produced in reactors of the CEA (Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique, Atomic Energy Commission).