RWE clinches nuclear plant settlement


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RWE-Delta Borssele Nuclear Deal sees RWE cut its stake to 30%, boosting Delta's public-sector majority in the Netherlands, aligns with Essent takeover terms, and includes potential participation in a second EDF-backed reactor.

 

Story Summary

Agreement gives Delta control of Borssele, cuts RWE to 30%, and allows possible 20% stake in a second EDF-linked plant.

  • RWE cuts Borssele stake from 50% to 30%.
  • Delta rises to 70% public-sector control.
  • RWE pays €609 million to Essent's former shareholders.
  • Essent sale excluded plant; price cut by €950 million.

 

German group RWE, Europe's fifth-largest utility, said it agreed to end a legal row with Dutch generator Delta over the ownership of the sole nuclear power plant in the Netherlands.

 

The deal offers a nuclear foothold for RWE in the Netherlands at a time when a big question mark hangs over its aspirations in Germany, amid moves like German firms building UK reactors continuing apace, where Chancellor Angela Merkel has reversed a decision to extend the life of nuclear plants.

Delta had challenged RWE's 50 percent ownership of the Borssele plant in the southwest of the Netherlands, which RWE inherited through its takeover of Dutch peer Essent in 2009, while peers like Nuon and Eneco adjusted supply contracts in the market.

Delta's challenge was on the grounds the plant should not be owned by a listed company.

"We have signed a memorandum of understanding with Dutch utility Delta," an RWE spokesman said.

Delta said in a statement that the deal, which would have to be approved by its shareholders in June and then finalized with RWE this year and reflects how German and French groups have expanded nuclear ownership in the UK, ended a long impasse over Essent's stake by securing public sector majority control of the plant.

"For us it is essential that the public interest in both the first, and second nuclear power plant to be built, is secured," Delta Chief Executive Peter Boerma said in the statement.

RWE had agreed to pay 950 million euros less to exclude the nuclear plant from its acquisition of Essent while it fought for the stake, which had stayed in the hands of Essent's public shareholders — Dutch provinces and local authorities.

RWE said that under the agreement it would reduce its stake in the 485-megawatt plant from 50 percent to 30 percent, highlighting that in neighboring Belgium reactor life extensions are being financed by operators, raising the shareholding of Delta, which is owned by local Dutch municipalities, from 50 to 70 percent.

A source with direct knowledge of the deal said RWE would pay 609 million euros for the 30 percent stake to Essent's previous shareholders, confirming an earlier report in Dutch financial daily Financieele Dagblad.

Dutch confidence in nuclear energy has been shaken by the disaster at the Fukushima plant in Japan, though with half the Dutch backing more nuclear the government intends to push ahead with plans to build a second nuclear power plant in Borssele.

The plan calls for awarding a license by 2014 for the second power plant with maximum capacity of 2,500 megawatts. Delta has already teamed up with French energy giant EDF through the Delta-EDF partnership to explore the development of the project.

Delta said that if the deal is approved, RWE may participate with a 20 percent stake as a partner, echoing cross-border moves like E.ON-EDF power swaps seen in continental markets, in the second nuclear plant in Borssele. An RWE spokesman said the company had not yet decided on whether it would take part.

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