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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan panel pledges tough TEPCO restructuring
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) June 16, 2011

An independent panel on Thursday pledged to oversee a tough restructuring of Japan's Tokyo Electric Power Co. to ensure the utility will raise what funds it can to pay huge compensation claims.

The five-member panel, led by lawyer Kazuhiko Shimokobe, former deputy chief of the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, will report to industry minister Banri Kaieda and submit its final report in September.

Japan's government on Tuesday put forward a bill to ensure that the utility can pay compensation to tens of thousands affected by the nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi plant crippled in the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

Tens of thousands of people remain evacuated from homes, farms and businesses in a 20-kilometre (12-mile) zone around and also beyond the radiation-spewing plant.

The bill calls for the creation of a body to handle claims made against TEPCO and will be funded by public money as well as contributions from power companies.

Analysts say its passage in parliament is likely to partly depend on whether the government can win over those opposed to it by enforcing tough restructuring on TEPCO.

"All items are subject to review by the panel, including personnel expenses and pension benefits," Shimokobe said in a news briefing, Dow Jones Newswires reported.

TEPCO's finances will be scrutinised to ensure it will do what it can to meet compensation estimated at several trillions of yen (billions of dollars) and avoid passing the cost on to the public in the form of a rise in electricity rates.

Under TEPCO's current restructuring programme, executives have to forego their annual remuneration, while ordinary workers have a 20 percent pay cut.

Other restructuring steps may include the separation of TEPCO's power generation and distribution functions.

In May TEPCO said it would sell assets not essential to power generation to raise more than 600 billion yen ($7.4 billion), after it reported a $15 billion annual net loss, the biggest ever for a non-financial Japanese firm.

The government-devised aid plan for TEPCO will include the purchase of its corporate bonds, stocks and assets but its passage through parliament is expected to be difficult amid opposition to it and after Prime Minister Naoto Kan announced he will resign in the near future.

-- Dow Jones Newswires contributed to this story --

burs-dwa/mtp




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Hitachi CEO confirms bid to build Lithuanian nuke plant
Vilnius (AFP) June 16, 2011 - The CEO of Japanese conglomerate Hitachi GE Nuclear Energy confirmed its interest Thursday in building a nuclear power station in Lithuania to replace its Soviet-era plant, closed in 2009.

"We wish to contribute to the goal of Lithuania and its regional partners to achieve a reliable, economic and independent energy supply," Hitachi president Hiroaki Nakanishi told reporters after talks with Lithuanian Prime Minister Andruis Kubilius in Vilnius.

"Our ABWR design is the only latest-generation reactor with a proven operational track-record, with four plants operational and five under construction," Nakanishi said.

Earlier this month, both US group Westinghouse and Hitachi submitted bids to build the new Visaginas nuclear power station in a project which also involves neighbouring fellow EU states Poland, Latvia and Estonia. A decision is due within months.

In the wake of Japan's Fukushima nuclear disaster, Lithuania is keeping plans on track to build the new reactor, unlike Germany which recently decided to phase out its nuclear energy plants by 2022.

But Vilnius has repeatedly criticised plans by Belarus and Russia to build atomic plants near Lithuania's borders, citing safety concerns.

Under the terms of its 2004 EU entry, in December 2009 Lithuania shut down its Soviet-era plant, similar to that which exploded at Chernobyl in Ukraine in 1986 in the world's worst nuclear meltdown.

The closure left Lithuania, a nation of three million, reliant on its Soviet-era master Russia for energy to generate its electricity.

Progress in building a replacement plant has been sluggish, and was dealt a blow last November when the Korea Electric Power Corporation unexpectedly withdrew its bid, forcing the project back to square one.

With a planned maximum capacity of 3,400 megawatts, the aim is to have the new plant online by 2020, six years after construction is scheduled to begin.





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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Westinghouse And BEH Sign Agreement On Nuclear Collaboration
Pittsburgh PA (SPX) Jun 16, 2011
Westinghouse has announced that it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Bulgarian Energy Holding EAD (BEH) under which the companies will discuss cooperation on a range of nuclear energy projects at the Kozloduy site in Bulgaria. These projects include support of the current operating plants in the areas of life extension and instrumentation and control, as well as decommiss ... read more


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