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18 Comments

  1. Good analysis. I confirmed much of your post in verbal discussions with BWXT exhibitors at WM2016 this week. They characterized the agreement as a “legal settlement” and a way to resolve the remaining liability issues BWXT may have regarding their agreement with Bechtel.

  2. I’d like to see a demonstration plant built. Small reactors were built in the 50s and 60s, some were successful demonstrations. If its simply an assembly of proven Navy technology, introducing the concept of commercial profitability and a different spectrum of capacity factor becomes necessary. The successful demonstrations resulted in commercial utility orders. It’s a large investment into unknown risk for a utility to buy first of a kind construction.

  3. I want to know why multi-billion dollar companies like Bechtel need to “find investors” to fund their projects? Bechtel has plenty of money – especially after the Iraq war.

    It reads to me like they are looking for some chump to pay the bills, who will then largely get cut out of the profits if their are any, OR like the companies involved are just looking for someone to recover their losses from, and then call the whole thing off. . .

    1. Diversifying risk by taking on investors is not an uncommon strategy. In fact, it’s a very old strategy, and it is why companies go public.

      I seriously doubt that any investors will be “cut out of the profits.”

      1. Tell me, Brian, if you are aware of Bechtel’s history, why would you….

        “seriously doubt that any investors will be “cut out of the profits.””

        (Rod, if you are going to remove this question asked of Brian, then by rights, you should remove his post as well.)

      2. Here is a Mass. State AG’s report on the settlement reached with Bechtel and Parsons for their work on the so-called “Big Dig”.

        It IS NOT my opinion, a news report, or politically spun media fluff. It is factual information, pointing to actual legal proceedings and conclusions waged against Bechtel.

        There are those here, such as Rod or Brian, that would love to simply label bechtel’s history as “off topic”, and would prefer information such as contained in this link be deleted.

        But Bechtel’s history, as it applies to corporate integrity and corporate ethics, is certainly fair game in any conversation about Bechtel’s role in technology development, investor participation in that development, and the expenditure of taxpayer monies in subsidies or loans.

        To those of you that manage to read this post before it disappears, ask yourself what it is that some here, including your host, would rather you do not know about Bechtel. And why they don’t want you to know it.

        http://www.mass.gov/ago/news-and-updates/press-releases/2008/big-dig-4582-million-global-agreement.html

        1. @poa

          That’s better. Facts are acceptable, vitriol and potentially libelous accusations are not.

          This site is not subject to “free speech.” It is not an organ of the federal government and Congress hasn’t been involved in drafting any of the unwritten rules that govern my moderation decisions.

          It’s rather impolite, for example, to insist on your right to post anything you want and then to complain about my right as the host and bill payer here to delete it.

          1. Rod…in the last couple of days, you have deleted numerous factual accounts of Bechtel’s history. The so-called “Big Dig” is just one brick in the wall of Bechtel’s history. I strongly suggest, to those of you unfamiliar with Bechtel’s history, to research Bechtel’s participation in “rebuilding” Iraq. My point, in being so tenacious about attempting to get the facts out there, is that as advocates for the NE industry, you should be concerned, not elated, about the role Bechtel will play. Certainly, your energy darling, NE, does not need to provide further fuel for the public’s mistrust.

            “I didn’t say anything about Bechtel.”

            Brian, you directly answered Jeff’s concern about Bechtel’s probable treatment of investors by basically telling Jeff his concerns are unfounded. I doubt many here, reading the exchange, accept your denial as credible, or even anything other than obvious back pedaling.

            1. @poa

              Rod…in the last couple of days, you have deleted numerous factual accounts of Bechtel’s history.

              Not true. I have deleted numerous opinionated and often profane accounts of Bechtel’s less-than-stellar record. It is a very large company with a long history in an industry that is well known to have some “ethical challenges” – large scale construction projects, especially those done in war zones or for government bodies that have inexperienced (or worse) contract managers. In some corners of the web and in books, the name is spoken with the same intense dislike as “Monsanto.”

              Neither company completely deserves the vitriol aimed at it.

              It’s important to recognize, on a site that plans to be respected and long-lived, that BPC is a company that has a well-earned reputation for fiercely defending its reputation; it has plenty of legal firepower on staff and on retainer.

              It’s possible to be critical without risking court battles. I prefer that path and will continue to do my best to enforce my choice here.

        2. You could establish your own website to post your facts, opinions and rebuttals on those topics you deemed important enough to address in the public sphere. That way you control the rules of discourse, just like Rod determines the rules on his site. Fair enough?

          1. Yes, I suppose.

            And Rod could have a website of adoring syncophants that never question or argue.

            Fair enough?

  4. I was part of the a major nuclear utility new build project. The vendor didn’t have detailed design complete when multiple utilities were considering construction. They actually wanted utilities to fund the accelerated completion of detailed design at + 100 M each, while having the gall to plead “Intellectual Property” when utilities sought just about any technical information. Less than two years in, the utility suspended the project.

    That’s all fixed by demonstrating the technology with a turn key plant.

  5. Downsizing in-house expenditures, while going after deep pocket investors. Read that, Uncle Sam. Thats not the kinda thing one likes to see from Bechtel. But hey, they have the connections that seem to consistently open the tax payer’s wallets.

    You really think, considering Bechtel’s history, that this is gonna have a happy ending? Its a no brainer I’m gonna be telling this blog “told ya so” in the not too distant future.

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