FORM 6-K

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549


                            Report of Foreign Issuer


                      Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of
                      the Securities Exchange Act of 1934


                                 August 5, 2004


                               BRITISH ENERGY PLC
                              (Registrant's name)


                               3 Redwood Crescent
                                   Peel Park
                             East Kilbride G74 5PR
                                    Scotland
                    (Address of principal executive offices)


Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual
reports under cover Form 20-F or Form 40-F.

                          Form 20-F..X.. Form 40-F.....

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information
contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the
Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

                               Yes ..... No ..X..

If "Yes" is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant
in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b):



                                 Exhibit Index

The following document (bearing the exhibit number listed below) is furnished
herewith and is made a part of this Report pursuant to the General Instructions
for Form 6-K:

Exhibit       Description

No. 1         RNS Announcement, re: AGM Statement dated 5 August 2004


                                                                 05 August, 2004

                               British Energy plc

                             Annual General Meeting

At today's AGM, Adrian  Montague,  Chairman,  said:  "Those of you who were here
last year will recall that I explained the difficult  steps that the Company was
taking in the face of its need to restructure. Much work remains to be done, but
over the past 12 months we have made considerable progress both in agreeing and
implementing our restructuring proposals.

In the last financial  year, we had a small UK operating  profit of GBP57m and a
total group operating profit for continuing activities of GBP340m. This compared
to a loss of GBP3.9  billion  in the prior  financial  year  following  a GBP3.7
billion write down of our UK generating  plant.  The  improvement in our results
over the year is due in part to the partial  reversal of that write down,  which
in turn reflects the improvement in the UK generation market.

We take some satisfaction from these results,  but there is a great deal more to
accomplish  before any of us will be content.  It has been a turbulent 12 months
in the power  market.  There seems  little doubt that prices have turned and the
era of cheap energy has ended, at least for now, as the market moves to a period
of structurally higher prices. Our ability to benefit from the rise in prices is
heavily  conditional upon the reliability of our plant,  which we are seeking to
sustain and improve through our Performance Improvement Programme (or PiP, as it
is known in the Company).

In all circumstances, safety is our number one priority. British Energy seeks to
operate to  world-class  safety  standards.  So it is  disappointing  to have to
record that,  during last year, our  performance  against key industrial  safety
indicators declined slightly. As you would expect, this is being addressed as an
important part of the Performance Improvement Programme". "Many of you will have
seen our announcement  last week reducing our target output for the current year
from 64.5 TWh to 61.5 TWh. We all know that British Energy has to change.  In my
judgement,  everyone at British Energy is ready to embrace the change we need if
British  Energy  is to  re-establish  itself  as a safe,  profitable  and  proud
generator of emissions-free power."

"But,  inevitably,  much  of  the  last  year  has  been  preoccupied  with  our
restructuring,  and I would now like to give you an update as to where we are in
that process.

As I am sure you know, we reached  agreement with our major creditors,  BNFL and
with the Government on the plan for the proposed  restructuring,  and the formal
agreements were entered into last October.  Last December,  we sold our interest
in AmerGen, and that satisfied a major condition for the Government's support of
the plan. However, other important conditions remain to be fulfilled.

Prominent   among  these  is  approval  by  the  European   Commission   of  the
Restructuring  Plan. We understand  from the Government  that their  discussions
with Brussels are making steady  progress and that it now expects the Commission
to reach its conclusion early in the Autumn.

The  restructuring  agreements  are  also  conditional  on  our  satisfying  the
Secretary of State that the company will be viable in the future  without access
to additional financing.  And we also need to finalise the mountain of documents
with our creditors, obtain court approval and complete the successful listing of
the new  shares  and  bonds.  Altogether,  there is a huge  volume of work to be
undertaken in order that we can complete the  restructuring  by 31 January 2005,
at the latest.

With this January deadline in mind, we expect that the public documentation - in
particular  listing  particulars  for  the  relisting  of the  Company,  and the
circular  convening  general  meetings of shareholders and bondholders - will be
published in mid-Autumn.

So what  does the  formal  restructuring  plan  mean to you,  our  shareholders?
Firstly,  and  as I have  mentioned  before,  it  will  mean a very  significant
dilution of your share  interests.  Under the agreed  proposals,  certain of our
major  creditors have agreed to extinguish  their  unsecured  claims against the
group  amounting to GBP1.3bn in total,  in exchange for:  GBP425  million of new
bonds, at least 97.5% of the issued ordinary shares of the  restructured  group,
and (in the case of creditors with claims relating to our Eggborough subsidiary)
an option to purchase the Eggborough coal plant in 2010.

If you, our shareholders,  approve the  implementation of the restructuring plan
in one of the ways explained in our announcement last October, shareholders will
receive new  ordinary  shares  equal to 2.5% of the capital of the  restructured
group,  together  with  warrants  to  subscribe  for a  further  5% of the share
capital, or just the warrants,  depending on the level of support achieved. This
is rather  complicated  territory,  which I will mention only briefly today, but
which we will explore at length at the EGM that we'll  convene later in the year
to give final effect to the restructuring.

We all have to  recognise  that last  October  the company was kept alive by the
Government  and  its  creditors  because  we  had  committed  ourselves  to  the
restructuring  plan. But for the  restructuring  plan agreed then, I believe the
company would already be in administration,  and shareholders would then receive
nothing.  In reality,  Ladies and Gentlemen,  the restructuring plan secured the
company's  survival.  We would not be here  today  unless we had  signed up last
October.

We took the  negotiations  to the  wire.  In fact,  the  existing  shareholders'
retained  interest was the last point to be settled  after many hours of fraught
discussion as, right to the end, several of our creditors  resisted fiercely the
notion of  shareholders  getting any shares at all in the company going forward.
The FT caught  the  flavour  of the  discussions  when,  in the Lex column for 2
October,  it said "British Energy's  bondholders are grumbling that shareholders
have got more than they  should".  Just  shows how  things  can change in a few,
short months,  doesn't it? In fact, you will find that what we achieved compares
well with other restructurings in the London market recently.  So, although this
is  still a bitter  pill to  swallow,  I am  satisfied  that we  could  not have
achieved more for  shareholders  when these  arrangements  were  concluded  last
October.

At this point,  I think it is  appropriate to address two other issues that have
become the subject of some discussion recently.

First of all, there has been  speculation  that a change to the listing rules of
the UK Listing  Authority  might mean that the Company would be required to seek
the consent of shareholders in order to de-list its existing shares, if that was
necessary to complete the restructuring. I would like to say a few words on this
topic.

In our announcement on 1 October last year, we explained that the  Restructuring
could  proceed by one of three  routes  depending  on the level of support  from
existing  shareholders.  The  third  of those  routes,  which we refer to as the
Delisting Route,  requires no support by way of a shareholder  vote,  relying on
the present form of the Listing Rules which simply provides for 20 business days
notice of  delisting.  Recent  consultation  papers  published  by the UKLA have
proposed the amendment of the Rules to introduce a requirement  for  shareholder
approval before a company's shares can be de-listed.  And, in a statement issued
a few days ago on 30 July, the UKLA said it was considering whether transitional
arrangements  would be appropriate for companies that had already announced that
they planned to de-list,  but had not actually delisted before any new rule took
effect.

In our announcement of 17 June, we stated that our belief that the timescale for
the introduction of any new rule would not prevent the implementation of the
restructuring.  In any event, if any rule change is accompanied by transitional
arrangements of the type referred by the UKLA in its statement last week, we
believe that the requisite advance warning has already been given by British
Energy, having regard to the several statements we have already made stating our
intention, if necessary, to delist to complete the restructuring.

If  the  rule  change  were  to  threaten  to  prevent   implementation  of  the
restructuring,  the Company would have little choice but to consider  de-listing
its shares in advance of the rule change  becoming  effective.  To fail to do so
could  imperil  the  existing  restructuring,  and might  expose the  company to
further claims from its creditors.  Of course,  the Board is aware of the impact
that delisting would have on our shareholders,  and we will not take that course
lightly. If we do need to delist early, shareholders will nonetheless be offered
the  opportunity  to approve  the  members'  scheme  and the  disposal  and,  if
approved, to receive the proposed returns for shareholders provided for in those
cases.

That  brings me to the  second  issue I would  like to  discuss.  There has been
speculation  that the  restructuring  will not, or perhaps ought not, proceed in
the form that I have outlined.

First, will the restructuring proceed?

As we have made clear throughout the restructuring  process, and as I have again
made  clear this  morning,  the  restructuring  itself is subject to a number of
significant uncertainties and important conditions.  But we should place this in
its proper  context.  Of course,  there  remain some very  significant  steps to
overcome,  but we have made, and are continuing to make, good progress. I cannot
tell you for certain that  everything  will go  smoothly,  as there are risks at
every stage that could  prevent the proposed  restructuring  going ahead,  but I
should  say that the  company  intends to take all the steps open to it to bring
the present deal to fruition.

Next, should the restructuring proceed in its present form?

In the last few weeks, new shareholders have emerged who are contending that the
terms of the  restructuring  should  be  revisited.  They  say  that the  recent
increase in power  prices has or ought to have made the company  more  valuable,
and therefore  our creditors are getting a better deal than they fairly  should.
As I said earlier, a marked contrast to where things were ten months ago!

I have to tell you that the company  simply cannot pursue this line of argument.
The  restructuring  agreements  we  entered  into with  creditors,  BNFL and the
Government  are binding.  We do not have a choice whether we wish to give effect
to them or not.  There's  simply no other  viable  course open to us. We entered
into these  binding  agreements  in October  2003 - in return  for  keeping  the
company  afloat - when no other viable option was  available.  Those  agreements
provided the very best that could be negotiated  for  shareholders  at the time.
The only  alternative was  administration,  and then  shareholders  would get no
shares at all. And the restructuring  agreements require the Company to make all
reasonable efforts to implement the  restructuring.  As a result, the Company is
in no position to choose not to  restructure  on these terms,  and we can't help
those who want to challenge the deal. We simply have to press on.

That concludes what I wanted to say to you by way of introduction.  I'm sorry if
I've been very direct,  but I felt that it was important that I told you clearly
how I see  things.  Of course,  the  Restructuring  Plan is not before you for a
decision  today.  We won't be asking you to vote on it until  later in the year.
But the points I have discussed are clearly the issues of the day."



For further information please contact:

John Searles
Investor Relations                                       01355 262202

Andrew Dowler
Media                                                    020 7831 3113

                                   SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the
registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.


Date:  August 5, 2004                    BRITISH ENERGY PLC

                                           By:____Paul Heward____

                                           Name:  Paul Heward
                                           Title: Director - Investor Relations