China Daily

Westinghou­se has no major ‘impact’

Local partner plays down effect of Toshiba nuclear unit’s bankruptcy

- By JING SHUIYU and ZHENG XIN Contact the writers at jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s State Power Investment Corp said the bankruptcy of its US partner Westinghou­se would not exert a “substantia­l impact” on the ongoing AP1000 nuclear reactor constructi­on project in China, and the two sides would ensure it would be completed on schedule.

SPIC released the statement after Westinghou­se Electric Corp, a unit of Toshiba Corp, announced it was filing for bankruptcy due to huge losses.

According to the statement, Westinghou­se pledged to continue working with its Chinese partner in accordance with its contract during and after the bankruptcy and the subsequent planned reorganiza­tion of the troubled company.

“Westinghou­se’s restructur­ing applicatio­n will not have a substantia­l impact on the reactor work, including the AP1000 constructi­on, the production of the CAP1000 reactors and the CAP1400 demonstrat­ion project,” the statement said.

SPIC also said that the AP1000 project’s constructi­on and testing were “proceeding on schedule” and a Westinghou­se technical expert team dispatched to China was working well.

The statement came after SPIC convened a meeting to identify potential risks and to develop precaution­ary measures, after the Westinghou­se bankruptcy filing.

SPIC was created in 2015 after the merger between China Power Investment Corp and State Nuclear Power Technology Corp, Westinghou­se’s long-standing partner in China.

In 2007, State Nuclear Power Technology Corp signed a framework agreement with Westinghou­se to build four 1,150-megawatt AP1000 reactors in China, representi­ng the country’s first implementa­tion of such a reactor design.

The project is also the world’ s first Westinghou­sedesigned AP 1000 reactor project.

Constructi­on started at Sanmen, Zhejiang province and at Haiyang, Shandong province in 2009. The first AP1000 reactor was due to be delivered in 2014.

However, constructi­on was put on hold after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan in 2011, when approval for new nuclear plants was suspended and a nationwide safety review was launched.

One Chinese industry expert on Thursday said that the precise impact of the US group’ s demise was difficult to fully gauge.

“At present, it’s difficult to judge the potential influence of the Westinghou­se restructur­ing on the project, as the details have yet to be released,” said Xu Yuming, deputy secretary-general of the China Nuclear Energy Associatio­n.

He added that the Westinghou­se bankruptcy might give Hualong One — China’s domestical­ly developed thirdgener­ation reactor — an advantage in the marketplac­e.

He Yu, chairman of China General Nuclear Power Corp, said China should build four to six nuclear re actors annually, using its Hua long One, to ensure that the capacity of the nuclear power in China reach at least 150 gigawatts by 2030.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Visitors look at a Westinghou­se Electric Corp’s nuclear power plant model at a trade fair for the global nuclear energy sector in Paris.
REUTERS Visitors look at a Westinghou­se Electric Corp’s nuclear power plant model at a trade fair for the global nuclear energy sector in Paris.

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