LONDON: Britain may try to make a number of nuclear sites currently up for auction more attractive to buyers by including assets owned by up-for-sale British Energy, the Sunday Times said. The move would ease fears that the eventual buyer of BE will have total control of the country's nuclear power industry, which is enjoying a renaissance after the government sanctioned the building of a new fleet of stations.
The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA), which owns 18 sites, including two with operational reactors, said last month its assets were now up for sale.
Two weeks later British Energy, which runs power stations on its own sites, said it was in takeover talks. The new set of nuclear stations are highly likely to be built on the NDA and BE sites.
The government is keen to avoid competition problems by making sure the two site portfolios go to different companies.
The NDA offering is said to be of a lower quality, but adding BE sites to the mix may encourage a loser in the fight for BE to bid for the NDA sites as a consolation.
The Mail yesterday newspaper said the NDA will soon announce that there has been a lot of interest in some of its land, and that French giant EDF and Germany's RWE – the two favourites to take over British Energy – were frontrunners to buy it. The government could not be reached for comment.
The battle for British Energy heated up last week as sources familiar with the matter said both RWE and EDF were prepared to bid a little under 700 pence a share for the group, valuing it at 11 billion pounds.
British Gas-owner Centrica made an all-share proposal, while Spain's Iberdrola, Germany's E.ON and Sweden's Vattenfall could come in at a later date.