Westinghouse Files for Bankruptcy, in Blow to Nuclear Power
Source: New York Times
Westinghouse Electric Company, which helped drive the development of nuclear energy and the electric grid itself, filed for bankruptcy protection on Wednesday, casting a shadow over the global nuclear industry.
The filing comes as the companys corporate parent, Toshiba of Japan, scrambles to stanch huge losses stemming from Westinghouses troubled nuclear construction projects in the American South. Now, the future of those projects, which once seemed to be on the leading edge of a renaissance for nuclear energy, is in doubt.
This is a fairly big and consequential deal, said Richard Nephew, a senior research scholar at the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University. Youve had some power companies and big utilities run into financial trouble, but this kind of thing hasnt happened.
Westinghouse, a once-proud name that in years past symbolized Americas supremacy in nuclear power, now illustrates its problems.
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Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/29/business/westinghouse-toshiba-nuclear-bankruptcy.html
dalton99a
(81,745 posts)No renaissance for you!
zentrum
(9,866 posts).....
Friend or Foe
(195 posts)If he's willing to take credit for jobs planned in year's prior to 2017, then he needs to accept blame for this.
Odoreida
(1,549 posts)Tikki
(14,568 posts)It's part of what his cartel has always supported.
Looks like lost jobs and will there be lost pensions!!!!
Tikki
progree
(10,966 posts)Japan's government spokesman Yoshihide Suga said the two governments were having thorough discussions on the issue.
Toshiba acquired Westinghouse in 2006 for $5.4 billion, then a major bet on a rebirth in nuclear projects due to high oil and gas prices, convinced that governments would cap carbon emissions to prevent global warming.
The company expected that it would win contracts to build dozens of its new AP1000 reactors, allowing it to build a pipeline of future work for its nuclear power plant maintenance division.
Regulators in both Georgia and South Carolina approved the construction of AP1000 reactors in 2009, a sign of a nuclear renewal taking hold. ...
More: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/toshiba-approves-chapter-11-filing-nuclear-unit-westinghouse-020157059--sector.html
Then along came Fukushima (March 2011) ...
NewJeffCT
(56,829 posts)put them in charge of our nuclear weapons and wessels.
Warpy
(111,529 posts)I remember the "peaceful atom" commercials in the 50s, electricity so cheap you won't even have a meter!
Unfortunately, containing radiation and preventing the fuel from eating through the containment and contaminating groundwater were big deals, as were materials fatigue from constant radiation exposure. That dream of set it and forget it power plants that would quietly generate electricity in the background that they sold everybody was a boondoggle of epic proportions. Westinghouse just didn't know when to quit.
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)No Westinghouse, no fall back if there is a big problem,.
It's like Ford going bankrupt after the..... Pinto?..... or any other massive car problem.
Warpy
(111,529 posts)Securing the tottering and/or defunct plants will likely fall to the Army Corps of Engineers and guess who will be stuck with the tab.
burrowowl
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