Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

INDIA, US FIRM SET TO CLOSE BIG NUCLEAR DEAL

RIGHT PATH Toshiba-Westinghou­se makes offers to Indian authoritie­s

- Shishir Gupta shishir.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Eight years after the two countries initialled a historic civilian nuclear agreement, India and US are engaged in hectic price negotiatio­ns to close a signature deal between Nuclear Power Corporatio­n of India Limited (NPCIL) and Toshiba-Westinghou­se (T-W) for six nuclear reactors.

The deal — the first of its kind involving a US company — could well be inked during PM Narendra Modi’s visit to Washington for the Fourth Nuclear Security Summit between March 31 and April 1.

The Modi government remains tight-lipped about the negotiatio­ns, but official sources confirm that Toshiba-Westinghou­se made a formal “techno-commercial” offer to NPCIL and “uranium fuel offer” to the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) last week for the Mithi-Virdi 6,000 MW power plant near Bhavnagar in Gujarat. NPCIL and T-W had already initialled a preliminar­y early works agree-

DEAL IS HELPED ALONG BY THE FACT THAT INDIA AND JAPAN SIGNED A SIMILAR AGREEMENT IN 2015

ment in September 2013. “Both offers are under examinatio­n. The total capital cost as well as per unit power cost is under considerat­ion. A US Exim Bank team is expected in India shortly for the financing package. The deal will be signed once these issues are sorted out,” said a senior official.

The Toshiba-Westinghou­se deal is also helped along by the fact that India and Japan signed a similar civilian nuclear agreement during PM Shinzo Abe’s visit to India in December 2015. “Commercial negotiatio­ns are on but it is not clear whether they can be closed by the time Prime Minister Modi reaches Washington. All efforts are being made to record forward movement,” said a senior official. Nuclear industry sources based in India and the US have independ- ently confirmed the price parleys with ballpark price figures of $4.1 billion (`27,000 crore) for two Westinghou­se AP 1000 reactors. The first nuclear agreement after the 2008 India-US agreement was for building three and four units of 1,000 MW each for Kudankulam Power plant in TN with Russia in 2014 at a cost of nearly`33,000 crore.

Top government sources said commercial negotiatio­ns with Westinghou­se are required as Central Electricit­y Authority (CEA) has mandated the nuclear power price at ` 6.50 per unit. To ensure that the commercial price remains within the mandated ceiling, India may negotiate for a bulk order of six AP 1000 light water enriched uranium nuclear reactors instead of two required for the first phase of plant commission­ing.

“If the two sides reach commercial close, the two companies will sign a general framework agreement with techno-commercial agreement as part of the annexure. Both India and US are seeking closure as this is the last year of Barack Obama administra­tion,” said a senior official.

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