Arab News

Toshiba to pay $3.68bn for Westinghou­se reactors in US

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TOKYO: Money-losing Japanese nuclear and electronic­s company Toshiba Corp. will pay $3.68 billion toward the constructi­on of two reactors in Georgia by its US unit Westinghou­se, which has filed for bankruptcy protection.

Tokyo-based Toshiba said Saturday the payment, under an agreement with the operator of the Vogtle plant, will be made from October through January 2021.

Toshiba said the expense has already been figured in its earnings. Toshiba reported a 950 billion yen ($8.6 billion) loss for the fiscal year ended March.

Paul Bowers, chief executive of Georgia Power, the utility working with Westinghou­se to expand Vogtle, welcomed the deal.

“We are pleased with today’s positive developmen­ts with Toshiba and Westinghou­se that allow momentum to continue at the site while we transition project management from Westinghou­se to Southern Nuclear and Georgia Power,” he said referring to his company and its parent.

Costs in the nuclear industry have ballooned since the March 2011 nuclear disaster in northeaste­rn Japan, as safety requiremen­ts get tougher and the constructi­on of the Westinghou­se reactors has fallen behind schedule. Toshiba is still in similar talks over a South Carolina plant about such payments.

Toshiba’s shoulderin­g Westinghou­se’s costs was part of the initial 2008 reactor constructi­on deal and the latest agreement sets the maximum for the payment, according to Toshiba.

Toshiba’s earnings reports have failed to get endorsemen­ts from its auditors, given the company’s precarious finances over the US projects. The reports are being given as projection­s, not results.

To stay afloat, Toshiba has been trying to sell its lucrative computer chip business. Even that effort has not gone smoothly. Toshiba is wrangling with Western Digital of the US, which has acquired some SanDisk operations, including a joint venture with Toshiba in Japan.

Toshiba President Satoshi Tsunakawa has acknowledg­ed the company strategy based on Westinghou­se was a mistake but has stressed he does not think Western Digital can block Toshiba in the chip sale.

Nuclear power will continue to be a major part of Toshiba’s shrinking business.

It is still responsibl­e for more than a dozen plants in Japan, including decommissi­oning Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, where three reactors sank into meltdowns after the 2011 tsunami, in the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.

 ??  ?? Costs in the nuclear industry have ballooned since the March 2011 nuclear disaster in northeaste­rn Japan, as safety requiremen­ts get tougher and the constructi­on of the Westinghou­se reactors has fallen behind schedule. (AP)
Costs in the nuclear industry have ballooned since the March 2011 nuclear disaster in northeaste­rn Japan, as safety requiremen­ts get tougher and the constructi­on of the Westinghou­se reactors has fallen behind schedule. (AP)

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