Toshiba to 'stop building' new nuclear plants

Toshiba is braced for losses to its US nuclear business that could reportedly reach $6.2 billion

Japan's Toshiba is set to dramatically reduce its nuclear operations and stop building new atomic power plants after suffering billion of dollars of losses on US projects, a report said. The engineering conglomerate, a once proud pillar of corporate Japan, is undergoing major restructuring after an accounting scandal and huge losses in its nuclear business. The company now intends to announce plans to exit nuclear power plant construction by the middle of February, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday on its website, citing an unnamed Toshiba executive familiar with the matter. Toshiba chairman Shigenori Shiga and Danny Roderick, a Toshiba executive and the former head of its nuclear power unit Westinghouse Electric, are expected to step down, the paper said, citing the executive. A Toshiba spokesman declined to comment on the report. Toshiba, however, is expected to continue designing and making nuclear reactors and other components for nuclear plants, according to Nikkei business newspaper and other local media. Toshiba said last week it was looking to "review" its foreign nuclear business, with local media reporting that the company would withdraw from construction of new plants. "It is a turning point for Toshiba," chief executive officer Satoshi Tsunakawa told a press conference last week. The beleaguered company has been engaged in a sweeping overhaul to deal with its problems, most notably the profit-padding scandal in which bosses for years systematically pushed subordinates to cover up weak financial results. It has been selling off cash-cow businesses and assets and is bracing for losses in its US nuclear business that could reportedly reach 700 billion yen ($6.2 billion). The company has already sold its medical devices unit to Canon and most of its appliance business to China's Midea Group. Toshiba said last week it was also moving to spin off its memory chip business to repair its battered balance sheet.