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Areva May Sign India Nuclear Contract Early Next Year
By Natalie Obiko Pearson
Oct. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Areva SA, the worlds biggest maker of atomic reactors, and Nuclear Power Corp. of India may sign an agreement early next year to build Indias first large-capacity plant using overseas equipment after a global ban was lifted.
Areva will initially supply the Indian state-run monopoly with two 1,650-megawatt reactors, according to the preliminary agreement between the companies in February. The final accord will be signed after getting French parliamentary and regulatory approvals.
That wont hold up progress on the signing of the final contract, Arthur de Montalembert, chairman and managing director of Arevas Indian unit, told Bloomberg News in Mumbai today. We dont foresee any problem there.
While the contracts can be signed, work on the project at Jaitapur in the western state of Maharashtra cant start until the approvals, he said. Areva may also offer Nuclear Power a stake in an African uranium mine to ensure fuel supplies for reactors.
It would most likely be in Namibia where we have a mine that is set to begin late this year or early next year, said Montalembert.
Buying shares in Arevas mines will help boost supplies for locally built atomic plants as domestic reserves of uranium are insufficient for Indias requirements. India plans to increase atomic power generation 14-fold by 2030 following the lifting of a three-decade global ban on nuclear trade with the South Asian nation last year.
- Bloomberg.com
By Natalie Obiko Pearson
Oct. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Areva SA, the worlds biggest maker of atomic reactors, and Nuclear Power Corp. of India may sign an agreement early next year to build Indias first large-capacity plant using overseas equipment after a global ban was lifted.
Areva will initially supply the Indian state-run monopoly with two 1,650-megawatt reactors, according to the preliminary agreement between the companies in February. The final accord will be signed after getting French parliamentary and regulatory approvals.
That wont hold up progress on the signing of the final contract, Arthur de Montalembert, chairman and managing director of Arevas Indian unit, told Bloomberg News in Mumbai today. We dont foresee any problem there.
While the contracts can be signed, work on the project at Jaitapur in the western state of Maharashtra cant start until the approvals, he said. Areva may also offer Nuclear Power a stake in an African uranium mine to ensure fuel supplies for reactors.
It would most likely be in Namibia where we have a mine that is set to begin late this year or early next year, said Montalembert.
Buying shares in Arevas mines will help boost supplies for locally built atomic plants as domestic reserves of uranium are insufficient for Indias requirements. India plans to increase atomic power generation 14-fold by 2030 following the lifting of a three-decade global ban on nuclear trade with the South Asian nation last year.
- Bloomberg.com