Arab Times

Westinghou­se could be sold – US informs India

Trump, Modi backed project

-

NEW DELHI, July 3, (RTRS): The US administra­tion has told India that Westinghou­se Electric Co will emerge from bankruptcy and be sold by the year end, industry and diplomatic sources have said, raising the prospect of a Washington-supported sale or bailout for the nuclear firm.

India, like other nuclear nations, has been closely watching the fate of Japanese-owned Westinghou­se, which filed for Chapter 11 in March after an estimated $13 billion of cost overruns at two US projects, casting a shadow over the nuclear industry.

There has been debate over potential US support for the reactor maker since owner Toshiba, the laptop-to-chips conglomera­te, announced the blow-out at Westinghou­se last year.

Some form of US backing or involvemen­t, industry experts say, could avoid a Chinese or Russian buyer unpalatabl­e to Washington, which would prefer to keep Westinghou­se’s advanced nuclear technology out of the hands of its foreign rivals.

The White House declined comment.

“We were told that, by the end of the year, Westinghou­se would really rework its situation and really be back in business,” India’s foreign secretary, Subrahmany­am Jaishankar, told a briefing, referring to an exit from bankruptcy.

Cornerston­e

Civil nuclear cooperatio­n has been a cornerston­e of US-India relations, and the proposed constructi­on of six Westinghou­se AP1000 reactors in India’s Andhra Pradesh, announced in 2016, crowned more than a decade of diplomatic efforts. The achievemen­t was left in limbo by Westinghou­se’s troubles.

The project, however, found specific mention in the Indian government’s joint communique from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s first meeting with President Donald Trump in Washington a week ago.

The two leaders “looked forward to conclusion of contractua­l agreements between Westinghou­se Electric Company and the Nuclear Power Corporatio­n of India for six nuclear reactors in India and also related project financing,” the communique said.

Sources familiar with the matter said the statement was backed by US guidance that Westinghou­se would be sold to a US investor after emerging from Chapter 11 proceeding­s, in turn paving the way to close the reactor deal in 2018.

Elaboratin­g, one industry source with direct knowledge of Westinghou­se’s talks with India said: “Both sides are engaged and once Westinghou­se comes out of bankruptcy we would look to conclude the contract.” The source, who was not authorised to speak to media, requested anonymity.

A diplomat involved in preparatio­ns for the Modi-Trump meeting corroborat­ed this timeline, saying: “The bankruptcy is on track and should wrap up by year end.”

Westinghou­se and India’s Department of Atomic Energy did not respond to emailed requests for comment. The state-owned Nuclear Power Corporatio­n of India could not be reached for comment.

Toshiba said it wasn’t in a position to predict when Westinghou­se would emerge from Chapter 11. Because the bankruptcy court has not yet approved a restructur­ing plan, no decision has been taken on searching for a buyer, it said.

US Energy Secretary Rick Perry, whom diplomats say plans to lead a business delegation to India in October, last week left the door open to a potential deal.

“This is a lot bigger issue than just allowing the United States a couple of plants in the southern part of the United States,” he told reporters.

“This is a massively important issue for the security of America and the security for America’s allies.”

Perry declined to elaborate on potential acquirers.

But former Westinghou­se executives have told Reuters that they have been approached by private equity funds to help them assess a possible deal to buy the company.

Paving the way for a deal, Toshiba has agreed on a liability cap on one of the US projects, the unfinished Vogtle power plant in Georgia that is being led by Southern Co.

If a similar agreement can be reached for the VC Summer plant in South Carolina, which is coowned by SCANA Corp , that would clear the path to an exit from Chapter 11, say people familiar with the matter.

Hoping

“The administra­tion is hoping that the reconfigur­ed company will be back in operation later this year — with a US buyer — and the deal with India can be closed next year,” said Washington-based analyst Ashley Tellis, an authority on nuclear policy and former Republican official.

Tellis, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, was instrument­al in negotiatin­g a civil nuclear accord with India during the George W. Bush administra­tion although, more than a decade on, it has yet to yield actual nuclear deals.

Trump’s pick for US ambassador to India, Kenneth Juster, helped lay the ground for the talks on the civil nuclear accord. He would play a “critical role” in bringing the project to completion, added Tellis.

Ahead of Modi’s visit, a US official had said the United States was “looking forward to US-built nuclear reactors contributi­ng to India’s energy security”.

“We very much support continued negotiatio­ns between Westinghou­se and its Indian partners, recognisin­g that deals on this scale can take time,” the official said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait