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Areva Wins $11.9 Billion China Nuclear Reactor Accord
in-en.com  2007-11-26 14:52:33  

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Areva SA won an 8 billion euro ($11.9 billion) agreement from China to build nuclear reactors, a record for the French company, as the fastest-growing major economy diversifies energy supplies.

China Guangdong Nuclear Power Group Co. will order two nuclear reactors from the world's largest maker of the units, Areva Chief Executive Officer Anne Lauvergeon said in Beijing today during President Nicolas Sarkozy's visit to the Chinese capital. Guangdong Nuclear also gains access to 35 percent of production from Areva uranium unit UraMin Inc., she said.

Areva and Toshiba Corp.'s U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric Co. unit are competing to build as many as 26 reactors by 2020 as China turns to atomic energy to cut pollution and reliance on oil. The nation needs to build two reactors a year to meet a target of getting 4 percent of its power supply from nuclear plants by 2020. China also wants to gain nuclear power expertise.

``It is a balance that China is seeking between its relations with the U.S. and France, by awarding them two separate plants,'' Zhou Bo, a senior analyst with Shanghai-based Shenyin & Wanguo Securities Co., said by phone today.

Westinghouse secured a $5.3 billion order from China in July. That accord includes the supply of equipment and technology to build four reactors. China's energy demand is increasing, boosted by an economy that expanded 11.5 percent in the third quarter.

Electricite de France

Electricite de France SA, Europe's largest power generator, will own 30 percent of two nuclear power reactors Areva will build in the city of Taishan in southern China's Guangdong province. Areva will supply nuclear fuel for the two units until 2026, Lauvergeon said.

``It's a record contract,'' Lauvergeon said. ``There will be technologies transferred in the ventures'' to Areva's Chinese partner. Contracts for the accord were signed in Beijing today.

The reactors will each have capacity of 1,700 megawatts, Guangdong Nuclear said in a statement released in Beijing today.

``We have been partners with China Guangdong Nuclear for 20 years and we are going to build and operate'' the two nuclear reactors with Areva, Pierre Gadonneix, chairman of EDF, said in the Chinese capital.

The French and Chinese governments will sign a separate cooperation contract involving China National Nuclear Corp., the nation's biggest nuclear reactor builder, to study building a 15 billion-euro nuclear waste recycling facility in China, Lauvergeon said.

Coastal Sites

China, the world's largest energy consumer after the U.S., will increase its spending on nuclear power plants by 12.5 percent to 450 billion yuan during the 15 years ending 2020, the National Development and Reform Commission, the country's top economic planner, said Nov. 2.

Nuclear power capacity in operation will reach 44.97 gigawatts by 2020, the commission said then. The government has selected 13 sites in coastal areas to construct an additional 59.46 gigawatts of capacity, it said.

China now operates 11 reactors with a combined capacity of 8,700 megawatts, or 1.6 percent of the nation's total electricity capacity, Kang Rixin, president of China National Nuclear, said Oct. 15.

Areva and China Guangdong Nuclear may change the location of two reactors proposed for southern China to fit in with the region's energy plans, Chu Pinchuang, senior engineer at the Chinese company said Aug. 22. The reactors were planned for Yangjiang in the province of Guangdong.

Guangdong Province

Guangdong province, China's biggest manufacturing hub, plans to spend 73.9 billion yuan by 2010 on nuclear power plants, the 21st Century Business Herald newspaper said in May, citing Chen Shanru, director of the province's development and reform commission.

Shenzhen-based China Guangdong Nuclear is the nation's second-biggest nuclear power plant constructor.

Airbus SAS, the world's largest commercial planemaker, won an order from China for 160 aircraft valued at around $17 billion. The deal comprises 110 A320s and 50 A330s, Louis Gallois, chief executive officer of European Aeronautic, Defence & Space Co., Airbus's parent, said after the contracts were signed in Beijing today. The deal includes 10 A330 aircraft ordered by China Southern Airlines Co., according to an announcement at a news conference in Beijing.

 


 
Author:Bloomberg  From:Bloomberg  Edit:fenghua
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