Japanese general contractors Taisei and Obayashi will participate in the
construction of a nuclear power plant project in Turkey led by the
Japanese and Turkish governments, media group Nikkei reported on June
20.
Major French construction company Bouygues and two or three
Turkish contractors will partner with Taisei and Obayashi in a joint
venture, Nikkei said, adding that the project would be the first
overseas nuclear plant construction to include Japanese general
contractors.
The plan is to build four reactors in the northern province of Sinop.
Construction
on the first reactor will start in 2017 at the earliest, with plans to
bring it online in 2023. The project is expected to cost 2 trillion yen
($16.3 billion), with 400 billion yen to 500 billion yen of that tied to
construction. As such, the complete project is expected to come in
lower than the original tender price of $22 billion.
Taisei will
lead the joint venture, and the two Japanese contractors likely will
fulfill the bulk of the duties, Nikkei reported. The venture is prepared
to submit a bid, but since project decisions are made between the
Japanese and Turkish governments, competing bids are not expected. The
project will be overseen by a soon-to-be-established company that will
include Mitsubishi Heavy as a stakeholder.
Taisei and Obayashi have
helped construct several Japanese nuclear plants, but new construction
ceased domestically after the 2011 Fukushima meltdown. Though the
Japanese building market has been bullish thanks to the 2020 Tokyo
Olympics, it is expected to shrink in the long term, leading contractors
to look overseas to expand their revenue bases reports Hurriyet Daily
(balkans.com)