CIVIL NUCLEAR
Finland's TVO claims partial win in Areva nuclear dispute
by Staff Writers
Helsinki (AFP) July 20, 2017


Finnish utility TVO on Thursday claimed another partial victory in arbitration in a bitter dispute with France's Areva over a troubled nuclear reactor, which the French side said was "disappointing".

Areva, together with German engineering group Siemens, has been building in Finland since 2005 what is meant to be a showcase of next-generation nuclear power, but delays and cost overruns have turned the project into a fight with their Finnish client TVO being arbitrated by the International Chamber of Commerce.

TVO, which had received a previous favourable decision in November last year, said the ICC this time addressed the issues of preparation, review, submittal and approval of design and licensing documents for the project.

The ICC issued a partial award which "rejected the analytical methods that the supplier (Areva) used," TVO Deputy CEO Risto Siilos told AFP, adding that content and the timing of submitting documents are key issues.

"With this award and the one earlier in November (the ICC) gave us more confidence that the balance of the claims is in TVO's favour," he added.

The ICC's partial award did not, however, take a position on the monetary claims of the companies.

An Areva spokesman said it was "disappointed by this partial decision" but reminded that the proceeding is ongoing with at least another partial award expected before a final decision in early 2018.

"Not all key topics were addressed," the Areva spokesman added.

The core issue of financial liabilities remains unsolved, with Areva claiming damages of 3.4 billion euros ($3.9 billion), and TVO 2.6 billion euros.

The Olkiluoto 3 reactor in western Finland was supposed to be the world's first European Pressurised Reactor (EPR), with a start date initially planned in 2009 but now delayed to 2018.

In September, TVO took fresh legal action against Areva in a French commercial court to seek assurances that the Olkiluoto 3 project would not get delayed again.

Areva has promised that it won't, saying the plant's cold tests, without nuclear fuel, are due to begin this year.

The latest decision "does not impact the project at all which is proceeding according to the planned milestones," the Areva spokesman said.

Meanwhile under a restructuring plan the troubled Areva Group's nuclear reactors business is being bought by French utility EDF, and the deal is expected to be finalised this year.

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Britain must leave EU nuclear body: Verhofstadt
Brussels (AFP) July 12, 2017
Britain cannot stay a member of the EU nuclear regulator Euratom after Brexit, whether it wants to or not, European Parliament Brexit pointman Guy Verhofstadt said Wednesday. But Euratom could continue its functions with regard to Britain if London signs an association agreement with the European Union following its departure from the bloc, he added. Membership of Euratom has become a ma ... read more

Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Lockheed awarded $130.3 million contract for Patriot missile foreign sales

US deploys Patriots in Lithuania for NATO war games

San Diego 'likely' in range of N.Korea ICBM in 2 years: US monitor

US conducts successful missile intercept test amid NKorea tensions

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Stratospheric Combat: Russian MiG-31 Intercepts, Destroys Supersonic Missile

UK Eurofighter Typhoon successfully fires MDBA Brimstone missile

Netherlands seeks missile warning system for its helicopters

Lockheed awarded $471 million contract for MLRS rocket production

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Explotrain develops drone-simulated IED training system

New Reaper drone variant performs first combat mission

Smart Quadcopters Find their Way without Human Help or GPS

Rafael unveils Drone Dome anti-drone system

CIVIL NUCLEAR
First UAVs, Now Ships - Connectivity for the next generation of remote naval operations

Northrop Grumman receives Australian satellite ground station contract

DISA extends Comtech satellite services to Marines

Harris Corp. awarded Special Forces radio contract

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Rheinmetall enhancing Puma IFV for German Army

Orbital ATK shows ammo development for MK44 gun

BAE awarded $15.2 million contract for Amored Multi-Purpose Vehicles

Orbital ATK signs $400 million in small arms ammunition supply deals

CIVIL NUCLEAR
DSCA approves Super Hornet upgrades, tank ammunition for Australia

Kelvin Hughes to be sold to Hensoldt

Defense spending by European NATO countries to rise in 2017

House Appropriations defense subcommittee bill could mean more ships, planes

CIVIL NUCLEAR
NATO warns Russia to honour war games promises

U.S. Navy ships to participate in Black Sea exercises

NATO vows support for Ukraine against Russia's 'aggressive actions'

China ships troops to its first overseas base in Africa

CIVIL NUCLEAR
New material resembling a metal nanosponge could reduce computer energy consumption

How do you build a metal nanoparticle?

Nanostructures taste the rainbow

Chemists perform surgery on nanoparticles