The Borneo Post

US, Japan in talks to prevent China acquiring Westinghou­se

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It’s a real concern; they’ve wanted to get their hands on power grid and nuclear infrastruc­ture for a long time. The Official

WASHINGTON: The Trump administra­tion and the Japanese government are in discussion­s to ensure that the bankruptcy of Toshiba Corp’s US unit Westinghou­se Electric Co does not lead to US technology secrets and infrastruc­ture falling into Chinese hands, a US official said.

Westinghou­se filed for bankruptcy last month hit by billions of dollars of cost overruns at four nuclear reactors under constructi­on in the US Southeast.

The bankruptcy is likely to lead to the eventual sale of Westinghou­se’s nuclear business and Chinese interests have been seen as possible buyers, given the chance.

“It’s a real concern; they’ve wanted to get their hands on power grid and nuclear infrastruc­ture for a long time,” an official in the US administra­tion told Reuters as China’s President Xi Jinping arrived in the US on Thursday for a first summit with US President Donald Trump.

“You go into a situation like the Toshiba situation where there’s financial chaos.

“There’s a chance that things can happen in a way that’s dangerous.”

Some nuclear technologi­es have dual use, meaning they can be used for civilian and military purposes.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said conversati­ons were going on between the US and Japanese government­s “on ways to mitigate a potential sale.”

“There are ways that are being looked at, both formally and informally, to make sure there is no threat to critical infrastruc­ture,” the official said.

Japan’s trade minister, Hiroshige Seko, denied that the Japanese and US government­s were in talks about the situation surroundin­g Westinghou­se, telling a regular news conference in Tokyo they were “not discussing it at all.”

Finance Minister Taro Aso told a separate briefing that his planned meeting with US Vice President Mike Pence this month in Japan was not expected to touch on Toshiba.

An inter-agency body of the US government known as the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) and its Japanese equivalent review the national security implicatio­ns of foreign investment­s in firms.

South Korea’s state- controlled Korea Electric Power Corp (KEPCO) has been considered the likeliest potential buyer for Westinghou­se.

Like Japan, South Korea is a security ally of the US, while China is a fast-growing strategic rival. — Reuters

 ??  ?? CEO of Westinghou­se Electric Company, Danny Roderick. — Reuters photo
CEO of Westinghou­se Electric Company, Danny Roderick. — Reuters photo

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