France: EDF ironizes on an infox of the rapper Gims and is enthroned “official supplier of the pharaohs

EDF reacted with humor to an unfounded claim by the rapper Gims, according to which the Egyptians had electricity since antiquity thanks to the pyramids. In an advertisement in Le Parisien, EDF declared: "EDF, official supplier to the Pharaohs since 2000 BC". In 2017 EDF had launched a campaign, "We owe you more than light"...

Share:

Subscribe for unlimited access to all energy sector news.

Over 150 multisector articles and analyses every week.

Your 1st year at 99 €*

then 199 €/year

*renews at 199€/year, cancel anytime before renewal.

The French electricity company EDF has ironized Thursday on an abracadabra theory relayed by the rapper Gims, according to which the Egyptians would have had electricity since the Antiquity, in a communication operation on the tone of the humor.

“EDF, official supplier to the pharaohs since 2000 BC”, the energy company claimed in a full-page advertisement published Thursday in the daily newspaper Le Parisien, with two large pyramids in the picture. “No, Mr. Gims, not at all. But we are sure that if electricity had existed in the time of the pharaohs, they would have chosen us”, adds EDF in this communication operation.

Deconstructing a misconception

“As a rational and scientific brand, for us, the idea was to deconstruct misconceptions with humor,” said EDF management, contacted by AFP. This “wink” also allows EDF “to address a young audience”, this communication operation was also declined on Twitter, Instagram and SnapChat, said the same source.

In a video interview of more than an hour and a half to the YouTube channel Oui Hustle posted on March 22, which has accumulated several hundred thousand views, the Congolese singer took up an ancient claim that the Egyptians had an electrical system from ancient times thanks to the pyramids. Three weeks later, on April 13, the singer released his latest track Hernan Cortes, named after the Spanish conquistador, on his YouTube channel. As an illustration, an image of pyramids, topped with a golden capital and near a pylon, cables and electrical cabinets.

An ancient and absurd theory

“At the time of the empire of Kush [appeared around 2.000 years before JC, NDLR], there was electricity. (…) The pyramids that we see there, at the top there is gold. Gold, it is the best conductor for electricity. They were damn antennas! People had electricity. People can’t understand that. The Egyptians, the science they had, it’s beyond comprehension, and historians know it!” advances the singer, followed by 3 million people on Instagram, and 11 million on Facebook as on YouTube.

This claim – unfounded – that Egypt had electricity long before it was invented in the 19th century, is far from new. In September 2018, it had already resurfaced in a video viewed more than 2.5 million times and entitled “the true mystery of the pyramids has finally been unraveled” which relayed this absurd theory of “power plants”.

Eneco’s Supervisory Board has appointed Martijn Hagens as the next Chief Executive Officer. He will succeed interim CEO Kees Jan Rameau, effective from 1 March 2026.
With $28 billion in planned investments, hyperscaler expansion in Japan reshapes grid planning amid rising tensions between digital growth and infrastructure capacity.
The suspension of the Revolution Wind farm triggers a sharp decline in Ørsted’s stock, now trading at around 26 USD, increasing the financial stakes for the group amid a capital increase.
Hydro-Québec reports net income of C$2.3 billion in the first half of 2025, up more than 20%, driven by a harsh winter and an effective arbitrage strategy on external markets.
French group Air Liquide strengthens its presence in Asia with the acquisition of South Korean DIG Airgas, a key player in industrial gases, in a strategic €2.85 billion deal.
The Ministry of Economy has asked EDF to reconsider the majority sale agreement of its technology subsidiary Exaion to the American group Mara, amid concerns related to technological sovereignty.
IBM and NASA unveil an open-source model trained on high-resolution solar data to improve forecasting of solar phenomena that disrupt terrestrial and space-based technological infrastructures.
The Louisiana regulatory commission authorizes Entergy to launch major energy projects tied to Meta’s upcoming data center, with anticipated impacts across the regional power grid.
Westbridge Renewable Energy will implement a share consolidation on August 22, reducing the number of outstanding shares by four to optimize its financial market strategy.
T1 Energy secures a wafer supply contract, signs 437 MW in sales, and advances G2_Austin industrial deployment while maintaining EBITDA guidance despite second-quarter losses.
Masdar has allocated the entirety of its 2023–2024 green bond issuances to solar, wind, and storage energy projects, while expanding its financial framework to include green hydrogen and batteries.
Energiekontor launches a €15 million corporate bond at 5.5% over eight years, intended to finance wind and solar projects in Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Portugal.
The 2025 EY study on 40 groups shows capex driven by mega-deals, oil reserves at 34.7 billion bbl, gas at 182 Tcf, and pre-tax profits declining amid moderate prices.
Australian fuel distributor Ampol reports a 23% drop in net profit, impacted by weak refining margins and operational disruptions, while surpassing market forecasts.
Puerto Rico customers experienced an average of 73 hours of power outages in 2024, a figure strongly influenced by hurricanes, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
CITGO returns to profitability in Q2 2025, supported by maximum utilization of its refining assets and adjusted capital expenditure management.
MARA strengthens its presence in digital infrastructure by acquiring a majority stake in Exaion, a French provider of secure high-performance cloud services backed by EDF Pulse Ventures.
ACEN strengthens its international strategy with over 2,100 MWdc of attributable renewable capacity in India, marking a major step in its expansion beyond the Philippines.
German group RWE maintains its annual targets after achieving half its earnings-per-share forecast, despite declining revenues in offshore wind and trading.
A Dragos report reveals the scale of cyber vulnerabilities in global energy infrastructures. Potential losses reach historic highs.

Log in to read this article

You'll also have access to a selection of our best content.

or

Go unlimited with our annual offer: €99 for the 1styear year, then € 199/year.