Southeast Europe’s largest nuclear project lacking EU companies

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News Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

The project does not yet have an exact price, but the government has announced that it will seek a bid of less than $14 billion for the two new AR-1000 reactors, which use technology from US company Westinghouse. [Shutterstock/Philip Lange]

South Korean company Hyundai appears to be the favourite to build units VII and VIII of the Kozloduy nuclear power plant, which is set to become the largest nuclear project in south-east Europe after the Bulgarian parliament ensured that competition was eliminated.

The project does not yet have an exact price, but the government has announced that it will seek a bid of less than $14 billion for the two new AR-1000 reactors, which use technology from US company Westinghouse. This means that electricity from the plant’s new units should cost €65 per megawatt hour, but some nuclear experts say the estimated cost of the reactors is unrealistically low.

Parliament’s decision was taken on Friday after more than three hours of debate. The proposal for the Kozloduy State Nuclear Power Plant to negotiate exclusively with Hyundai Engineering came from two parties in the ruling coalition – GERB (EPP) and DPS (ALDE). Negotiations must now be concluded by 15 April.

GERB and DPS rejected the proposal of the third formation of the ruling coalition, PP-DB, to hold simultaneous negotiations with Hyundai and the US company Bechtel, which works with Westinghouse in the Czech Republic and Poland. PP-DB is motivated by the fact that competition can reduce the project’s cost.

The scales were tipped by just one more vote in favour of Hyundai. In total, 112 votes were cast in favour, 111 against and abstentions.

Both alternative proposals require that Bulgarian companies carry out at least 30% of the activities. The construction period for the two units is 60 months and 54 months for the seventh and eighth units, respectively. It is planned that the first new nuclear unit will be integrated into the energy system by 2033.

“Parliament is not the institution that should choose the contractors, but should pass laws,” said PP-DB co-leader Kiril Petkov during the debate.

Delyan Dobrev (GERB) accused the PP-DB of trying to sabotage the contractor selection process for months.

A week ago, Dobrev, who heads the parliamentary energy committee, publicly announced that Hyundai was the only company that met Bulgaria’s conditions in the Kozloduy nuclear project.

Later that weekend, it was revealed that US nuclear companies Bechtel and Fluor, South Korea’s Hyundai and China’s CNNC had submitted bids. France’s EDF, which would have been the only European company in the running, also unofficially expressed interest in participating in the plant’s construction but eventually withdrew.

Last week, French President Emmanuel Macron met Bulgarian Prime Minister Nikolai Denkov in Paris, and the two agreed to strengthen cooperation in the field of nuclear energy.

For now, however, French companies are staying away from Southeast Europe’s largest nuclear project.

(Krassen Nikolov | Euractiv.bg)

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