India still keen to buy
Westinghouse reactors despite Toshiba meltdown
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[February 17, 2017]
By Douglas Busvine
NEW
DELHI (Reuters) - India does not expect fallout from the financial
meltdown at Toshiba Corp to halt plans to buy six nuclear reactors from
the Japanese company's U.S. nuclear unit Westinghouse, a senior
government official told Reuters on Friday.
Toshiba this week booked a $6.3 billion charge related to huge cost
overruns at Westinghouse, forcing it to put its flash-memory chip
business up for sale to stay solvent and pull out of nuclear power plant
construction overseas.
India has been in talks to locate half a dozen Westinghouse AP1000
reactors in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh under its drive to
expand nuclear generation and wean the economy off polluting fuels like
coal.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and former U.S. President Barack Obama made
nuclear cooperation a cornerstone of their friendship, announcing at a
summit last year that a Westinghouse deal should be finalised this June.
"As for the technical execution of the project, I do not see many
problems," Sekhar Basu, secretary of the Department of Atomic Energy
that reports directly to Modi, told Reuters in a short telephone
interview.
Negotiations on the technical and commercial terms of the reactor deal
have reached an advanced stage and India is dealing with Westinghouse -
and not Toshiba - so that process is not directly affected by the
Japanese company's pullback, he said.
Industry experts said that, if the project is still at all viable, the
main logistical challenge would be to reallocate civil engineering work
to other contractors while Westinghouse would only provide the reactors.
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A policeman walks on a beach near Kudankulam nuclear power project
in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, September 13, 2012.
REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File photo
India has not yet signed a contract with Westinghouse, nor has cash
changed hands. That means it does not face financial losses, but a delay
or cancellation would make it harder to hit its already ambitious target
of tripling its nuclear generating capacity by 2024.
Basu said that talks on financing had not yet begun in earnest and the
state-owned Nuclear Power Corporation of India (NPCIL) had yet to be
updated by Westinghouse on recent developments.
"The financial dialogue has yet to open over the new situation," Basu
said, adding, "I don't see much of a problem" if Westinghouse can offer
a solution that ensures unit costs for power are comparable to other
sources of energy.
It was not immediately clear when Westinghouse would send a team to
brief the Indian side after Toshiba said on Tuesday it would send
nuclear boss Daniel Roderick back to the U.S. firm, where he was
previously chief executive, to tackle the crisis there.
Westinghouse and NPCIL did not respond to requests for comment.
(Reporting by Douglas Busvine; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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