Related Articles
Top Stories
May 27 2012 11:21
There's a price war raging between South Africa's cellphone networks after Cell C lowered the rates of its prepaid calls by more than 34%.
May 28 2012 07:53
The City of Cape Town has spent R175m running the Myciti bus service since the Soccer World Cup compared to an income of R35m, a report says.
May 27 2012 13:09
The oversupply of golf estates has claimed another victim.
Cape Town - The days of the pebble-bed nuclear reactor (PBMR) company are numbered - at least as far as its current form and government financial support are concerned.
In its 2009 annual report published at the end of last year, the company states unambiguously that government has indicated that it will be unable to provide financial support for the company in the financial year ending March 2011 - or for the foreseeable future.
According to the group's recent annual reports the PBMR's operating costs have risen from R874.7m in the 2006 financial year to R1.962bn in 2009.
By March 2009 the government had funded the PBMR to the tune of R5.895bn. Together with capital contributions from shareholders Eskom, Westinghouse and the industrial development Corporation (IDC), the total was R7.721bn.
In the 2007 annual report it was estimated that the entire project - to build a demonstration reactor at Koeberg, as well as a nuclear fuel manufacturing plant - would cost R17bn. But by the 2008 financial year the total cost was estimated at R31.9bn.
A long-term retention bonus scheme was introduced in December 2005 to retain critical skills.
The scheme started out with an amount of R10.607m, but the first payments were made only in December 2008.
In the 2009 annual report the PBMR's audit, risk and finance committee warns that the company's ability to continue as a viable concern depends on whether it can get adequate finance to meet its commitments, as well as continued support from its funders. Government has so far been its main support.
In the report PBMR chairperson Dr Alistair Ruiters explains that the international credit crisis has forced government to make massive loans available to Eskom, which means that projects that depend on government funding will probably not receive their full allocation is.
The PBMR has therefore drawn up a new business plan and restructured itself as a nuclear engineering company focused on a single product that should satisfy the market for power generation as well as that for industrial heat applications.
- Sake24.com
For more business news in Afrikaans, go to Sake24.com.