The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Toshiba delays report, mulls Westinghouse sale
Firms’s heavy losses result of cost overruns at U.S. nuclear plants.
TOKYO — Troubled Japanese nuclear and electronics company Toshiba Corp. said Tuesday it was considering selling its money-losing Westinghouse operations in the U.S., a move that could affect a nuclear power plant expansion in Georgia.
President Satoshi Tsunakawa said the company was looking at selling its majority stake in Westinghouse and making a priority trying to get the energy giant’s battered results off its books.
Westinghouse’s heavy losses are the result of cost overruns on its contracts at the Vogtle nuclear plant near Augusta and a SCANA nuclear plant in South Carolina.
Georgia Power, the lead partner in the Plant Vogtle project, and parent Southern Co. have said they are watching the Toshiba situation but expect Westinghouse to meet its obligations on the Plant Vogtle expansion near Augusta.
Westinghouse is a major contractor on the project to add two new reactors, now scheduled for completion in 2020. It’s unclear how a sale or financial reorganization of Westinghouse might affect that timetable.
Tsunakawa, in a news conference after the company won approval for a second delay in reporting its earnings for October-December, said, “We want to deal with this properly.”
“We are working on nurturing our growth businesses to return to stable growth by fiscal years 2018 and 2019,” Tsunakwa added, reiterating apologies to stakeholders.
Toshiba had been scheduled to report earnings Tuesday, after delaying the report due in February because of auditing problems. It now has until April 11 to produce the report.
The company released a plan saying it was speeding up its review of the U.S. nuclear business, including possibly selling Westinghouse. It said it intends to expand in renewable energy while also working on its nuclear business in Japan to try to restore stable growth.
Toshiba expects a group net loss of 500 billion yen ($4.3 bil-
lion) for April-December of last year, including a 712.5 billion yen ($6.2 billion) hit from its embattled nuclear business.
Its chairman has resigned to take responsibility for the company’s troubles.
Toshiba acquired Westinghouse in 2006 with much fanfare, making nuclear power an important part of its business strategy.
But that was before the March 2011 nuclear disaster in Fukushima, which has boosted the costs of the business because of growing safety concerns and regulations, and a souring of sentiment toward nuclear power in some countries, such as Germany.
Westinghouse’s purchase in 2015 of CB&I Stone & Webster, a nuclear construction and services business, was meant to win more business in decontamination, decommissioning and plant projects, but it just amplified those problems.
Auditors questioned Toshiba’s latest reporting on the acquisition of CB&I Stone & Webster after a whistleblower, an employee at Westinghouse, wrote a letter to the Westinghouse president.
Toshiba said it was further investigating the acquisition, since a preliminary probe added to suspicions that some of the whistleblower’s allegations of wrongdoing might be true.
The company’s reputation has also been tarnished in recent years by a scandal over the doctoring of accounting books to meet unrealistic profit targets.
The company has said it will no longer take on new reactor construction projects and will focus on maintaining the reactors it already has. But it is also involved in the decommissioning of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, which suffered multiple meltdowns after the March 2011 tsunami.
Toshiba has already sold part of its chip business, and its president has said it is thinking about selling all of it to mend its finances. It sold its household appliance unit to Midea of China, which is maintaining the Toshiba brand name. It also is selling its entire 65 percent stake in a medical equipment leasing company to Japanese camera maker Canon Inc.