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    India seeks US loan for Russian-built KKNPP

    India is negotiating with United States’ Export-Import Bank for an $8-9 billion loan to finance six Westinghouse Electric nuclear reactors, two sources familiar with the talks said, although a lending freeze at the trade agency threatens progress.

    India seeks US loan for Russian-built KKNPP
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    File photo of the Kudankulam Nuclear Project

    Chennai

    The mega-project, the result of warming US-India ties in recent years, could open up billions of dollars of further investment in India’s nuclear power sector, which was for decades shut out of the global market. India now targets a tenfold expansion in capacity to 63,000 MW by 2032, and US, French and Russian companies are among those chasing the business. 

    The Westinghouse deal, however, is contingent on financing and Ex-Im cannot approve loans of more than $10 million, owing to a row in the US Congress over board appointments stemming from a campaign by conservatives to close the government lender. Only two of five seats on Ex-Im’s board are filled and the appointment of a third director – the minimum needed to clear board decisions – is on hold due to opposition from the Senate Banking Committee Chairman, Republican Richard Shelby.

    “Financing of the reactors is the critical piece; everything is down to this,” said one source involved in protracted negotiations to build the reactors in Andhra Pradesh. The source, requesting anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks, said Indian negotiators and Ex-Im officials were trying to set the terms of the financial package in the hope that the freeze on the bank, affecting potential sales of several major US companies, would lift soon. Westinghouse is owned by Japan’s Toshiba Corp but is based in the United States.

    In addition to US Ex-Im, India is also seeking funding from Japan and South Korea for the reactors to be built in Kovvada, two sources familiar with the talks said. Ex-Im had asked a South Korean export credit agency if it would be interested in partly financing the Westinghouse deal, since some of the nuclear equipment and materials are expected to come from South Korea, an official at the agency with direct knowledge of the discussions told Reuters. 

    The agency was willing to fund a part if a Korean contractor was involved, with Ex-Im providing the majority of the total, the official said. The US bank had not made any request to its Japanese counterpart to extend loans to the nuclear project in India, a source with direct knowledge said in Tokyo.

    Leadership Lobby

    Both US President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Narendra Modi have been promoting the nuclear deal, which was stuck for years because of an Indian law that made nuclear equipment suppliers liable in case of an accident, and not just the plant operators as is the global norm. India has since set up an insurance pool to indemnify suppliers, and both Westinghouse and India’s state-run operator Nuclear Power Corporation of India (NPCIL) are working to a June 2017 deadline to sign the contract laid down by Obama and Modi. 

    “The goal right now is to get that financing done during President Obama’s tenure, knowing full well that it may or may not stick in a new administration following the... presidential election,” said industry veteran Vijay Sazawal, principal of International Atomic Energy Consulting in Washington D.C. While negotiators are unlikely to nail down a contract under Obama, who steps down in January, their challenge will be to come up with concessional financing terms that will make Westinghouse’s AP1000 reactors affordable.

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