So close yet so far: China deal elusive for France's
Areva
Send a link to a friend
[January 11, 2018]
By David Stanway and Geert De Clercq
SHANGHAI/PARIS (Reuters) - A deal long
sought by French company Areva to build a $12-billion nuclear waste
reprocessing plant in China looks increasingly unlikely to go ahead
despite a visit to Beijing by President Emmanuel Macron meant to drum up
business.
During Macron's state visit this week, Areva and China National Nuclear
Corp (CNNC) signed a new "protocol agreement" to build the plant but,
not for the first time, no definitive contract was signed.
Since talks began more than a decade ago - when uranium prices <UXXc1>
were near record highs - a series of non-committal French-Chinese
memorandums of understanding have been signed for building a
reprocessing plant in China modeled on state-owned Areva's plant in La
Hague, northern France.
The reprocessing of nuclear fuel waste involves separating plutonium
from the spent uranium and reusing it in "Mixed Oxide" (MOX) fuel at
nuclear power stations.
But the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster and competition from renewable
energy are weighing on the nuclear sector, and uranium prices are down
80 percent from a decade ago, making the expensive and dangerous
recycling process less attractive.
Chinese nuclear scientist Li Ning, dean of Xiamen University's College
of Energy and a member of State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation's (SNPTC)
expert committee, sees "a fairly low probability" that China will sign a
formal contract for the project.
"In China, no new reactor projects have been approved for two years, a
reflection of overcapacity of power from other sources and concerns
about nuclear power, so the urgency of this (reprocessing) plant isn't
strong," he told Reuters.
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Tuesday Paris had been
given assurances that a contract would be signed this spring.
But French ministers and Areva executives have made similar comments
before. In November 2007, former CEO Anne Lauvergeon said Areva could be
building a reprocessing plant in China in two-to-three years "but we
will not sign the contract today".
In a statement on Wednesday, CNNC spoke of "deepening Chinese-French
nuclear cooperation" but did not even mention spent fuel or
reprocessing. Areva CEO Philippe Knoche said he hoped to finalize the
deal and start the project this year.
Without a site for the plant, that could be difficult.
In 2016, China suspended preliminary work on a possible site in the city
of Lianyungang, about 500 km (312 miles) north of Shanghai, following
protests by local residents.
An industry source, who has discussed the matter with CNNC, said that
with China no closer to selecting the location, it is unlikely a
contract will be signed any time soon.
[to top of second column] |
Philippe Varin (2nd R), Chairman of the Board of Directors of Areva,
meets with Chinese business leaders during the first meeting of the
French-Chinese business council opened by French President Emmanuel
Macron in Beijing, China January 9, 2018. Picture taken January 9,
2018. REUTERS/Ludovic Marin/Pool/File Photo
"Time is playing against Areva, and most people in the industry are skeptical.
What's the hurry?" he said.
Le Maire said talks with the Chinese were extraordinarily difficult and that
France had "made an effort" on the price to try to unblock negotiations. He said
the deal would be worth 10 billion euros ($12 billion). Ten years ago,
Lauvergeon spoke of 15 billion.
SAVIOUR
Le Maire also said a contract for a reprocessing plant would "save" the French
nuclear industry. After years of losses wiped out its equity, Areva had to sell
its nuclear reactor arm to utility EDF <EDF.PA>, and the state last year
provided 4.5 billion euros to recapitalizes the firm.
A contract for a reprocessing plant would be a major boost for uranium mining
and nuclear fuel group New Areva, whose margins are under pressure from the
uranium glut. But it still appears to be a long shot.
"The Chinese government and Chinese industry are not in the business of saving
Areva," Xiamen University's Li said.
He said China was likely to consider alternative solutions for nuclear waste,
including dry cask storage.
Reprocessing nuclear fuel requires highly secure, capital-intensive
installations that take a decade or more to build. Nuclear industry analyst
Mycle Schneider said reprocessing can cost up to 10 times more than enriching
uranium for fuel.
Critics say that when uranium is scarce, reprocessing can make sense, although
using plutonium creates proliferation and security risks. The alternative is to
store spent fuel in ponds next to the reactors and to put it in central
repositories, often underground, once it has cooled sufficiently.
The United States has given up on reprocessing, while Britain is phasing out
nuclear fuel recycling and the Rokkasho reprocessing plant in northern Japan,
built with Areva's help, has struggled to start up after years of technical
problems.
Besides France, Russia is the only country that reprocesses fuel, which it uses
in two breeder reactors. Such reactor models are highly suited for the fuel but
have been abandoned in most other nuclear nations.
"It makes no sense to do something as exorbitantly expensive as reprocessing
when there is plenty of fresh natural uranium out there," Schneider said.
(Writing by Geert De Clercq, Editing by Timothy Heritage)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |