PRAGUE, Nov 30 (Reuters) - CEZ has received
initial bids from France's EDF, South Korea's KHNP, and
U.S.-Canadian group Westinghouse to build a new unit at the
Dukovany nuclear power plant, the Czech electricity producer
said on Wednesday.
Majority state-owned CEZ, which launched the Dukovany
expansion tender in March, said final bids would come in by the
end of September 2023.
"We expect the contracts to be finalized in 2024," board
member Tomas Pleskac said in a statement.
The 1,200 megawatt-unit should come on line in 2036 and help
the country replace current Soviet-designed units at Dukovany
that will be eventually decommissioned.
Candidates from China and Russia were excluded on security
grounds.
CEZ plans to build three more nuclear units on top of the
one now planned at its current Dukovany and Temelin nuclear
sites, as the country diversifies away from coal and plans the
replacement of current nuclear capacity.
It is also planing to build smaller modular nuclear power
plants.
The government has been considering restructuring the 70%
state-owned CEZ, the biggest listed firm in Prague with market
capitalisation of $18.4 billion, in the coming years, which
could lead to the government fully taking over the nuclear
projects.
(Reporting by Jan Lopatka and Jason Hovet, writing by Robert
Muller; editing by David Evans)