Japan Atomic Power is considering splitting itself into two units, seeking to restructure its business to focus on the decommissioning of nuclear reactors on behalf of regional utilities, the Nikkei business daily reported yesterday.
The plan appears to reflect the government’s intention to reorganize Japan’s nuclear power businesses, which have effectively come to a halt since the 2011 Fukushima disaster, the newspaper said.
Calls made seeking a response to the Nikkei report were not returned immediately.
Unlisted Japan Atomic Power, owned mostly by Japanese power companies, including Fukushima reactor operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO), currently generates no electricity. All three of its reactors are offline.
It has managed to stay in business by receiving more than ¥100 billion (US$850 million) a year from the five regional utilities with which it has supply contracts.
However, with no prospect of restarting its reactors, the sponsor utilities have asked Japan Atomic Power to draw up a restructuring plan that creates a new revenue source, the Nikkei reported.
Japan Atomic Power is the only company in the country that operates both boiling-water and pressurized-water reactors, so it plans to realign human and technical resources according to reactor type.
Leading shareholder TEPCO proposed the plan, with second-largest stakeholder Kansai Electric Power seen agreeing with it.
The Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry is also looking to streamline the operation of Japan’s 48 nuclear reactors, each now owned and run separately by Japan’s regional power companies and Japan Atomic Power.
All of the nuclear reactors were gradually taken offline after meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant after an earthquake and tsunami in 2011. As many as two-thirds might never return to operation because of high costs, local opposition or seismic risks.
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