The Palm Beach Post

Canada’s Brookfield buys Westinghou­se for $4.6 billion

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CRANBERRY TOWNSHIP, PA. — Westinghou­se Electric, the U.S. nuclear unit of embattled Japanese electronic­s giant Toshiba, has been acquired in a deal valued at about $4.6 billion.

Westinghou­se Electric Co. declared bankruptcy protection early last year, leaving a number of nuclear projects in limbo.

The acquisitio­n by Canada’s Brookfield Business Partners LP on Thursday comes one day after an agreement tying up loose ends from two failed nuclear reactors in South Carolina.

South Carolina Electric & Gas Co. abandoned constructi­on reactors at the V.C. Summer Nuclear Station. Thousands were left jobless in the wake of the $9 billion failure, which was blamed by owners on the plight of Westinghou­se, the lead contractor. A deal proposed Wednesday could mean $1.3 billion in refunds for utility customers affected by the failed project.

The nuclear industry has struggled both because of the tremendous cost of building massive reactors and the accelerati­ng shift to other forms of energy such as natural gas and alternativ­e energy, including solar.

The industry, and Toshiba in particular, has been subjected to tighter regulatory control following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in northeaste­rn Japan.

Toshiba has been dumping assets to cover for its disastrous immersion into nuclear power, a play it once saw as a safe infrastruc­ture investment, free of the seasonal fluctuatio­ns of the power generation industry. Technology in both fracking, a form of drilling, and alternativ­e energy has upended the power sector.

Westinghou­se said Thursday that the deal with Brookfield doesn’t involve cash, but includes the assumption of a number of pension, environmen­tal and operating obligation­s. The deal is expected to close in the third quarter.

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