Global Times

Westinghou­se filing ‘ won’t affect China’

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China’s State Power Investment Corp said Thursday that Westinghou­se’s bankruptcy filing won’t have a “substantia­l impact” on China’s nuclear plans and the two sides will ensure a key AP1000 reactor project is completed on schedule this year.

The project is the world’s first Westinghou­se-designed AP1000 reactor plant, being built at Sanmen, East China’s Zhejiang Province, and one of four reactors planned with State Power.

“The two sides were fully aware of the importance of the Chinese AP1000 project and agreed to continue to make the project a common priority and increase investment to ensure that the target of putting the reactor into operation this year is met,” it said in a statement.

The first AP1000 was due to be completed in 2014, but constructi­on was subject to delays as a result of design problems as well as China’s review of the nuclear industry following the Fukushima disaster in Japan in 2011.

Westinghou­se hoped the AP1000 would become the centerpiec­e of China’s ambitious nuclear strategy, and it expected to win dozens of new projects.

But industry sources said the US- based company underestim­ated China’s ability to develop its own third- generation designs, with China’s Hualong 1 reactor selected over the AP1000 for a number of domestic nuclear projects.

A Chinese nuclear industry official said earlier this month that the reactor was still scheduled to go into full operation in the second half of 2017.

“The restructur­ing applicatio­n by Westinghou­se will not have a substantia­l impact on third- generation reactor work such as the constructi­on of the AP1000, the subsequent constructi­on of a batch of CAP1000 reactors or the CAP1400 demonstrat­ion project,” the company said.

Westinghou­se filed for bankruptcy on Wednesday as a result of billions of dollars of cost overruns at four reactors under constructi­on in the US.

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