*http://www.marketwatch.com/story/trump-team-team-trying-to-keep-china-away-from-westinghouse-voters-pan-government-shutdown-in-poll-2017-04-05
<http://www.marketwatch.com/story/trump-team-team-trying-to-keep-china-away-from-westinghouse-voters-pan-government-shutdown-in-poll-2017-04-05>*

*China away from Westinghouse | Voters pan government shutdown in poll*

*Ahead of a meeting b**U.S.-based venture capital firms with substantial
ties to China have generated concerns in Congress. Most recently,
Republican Representative Robert Pittenger of North Carolina wrote to the
Treasury Department to object to Canyon Bridge Capital Partners’ purchase
of Lattice Semiconductor, a producer of U.S. military applications and
technology. The venture capital firm “appears to be directly affiliated”
with the Chinese government, Pittenger said in a December letter.*
*Barack Obama blocked two Chinese deals when he was president: one for a
wind farm in Oregon and the other for the U.S. business of Germany’s
Aixtron SE, a semiconductor supplier.*
*Westinghouse supplied the world’s first commercial pressurized water
reactor more than half a century ago in Pennsylvania. There are currently
more than 430 nuclear power stations globally, with about half based on
Westinghouse technology.*
*Troubled Acquisition*
*Toshiba bought Westinghouse for $5.4 billion in 2006. The company foresaw
rising demand for nuclear power in the U.S., U.K. and China. Instead,
natural gas became cheaper and the 2011 nuclear disaster in Fukushima,
Japan, further soured the public on nuclear energy. The Japanese
conglomerate has already lost $6 billion on the purchase.*
*Five Chinese military officials were indicted in absentia in 2014 for
allegedly stealing trade secrets from Westinghouse through computer hacks.
A state-owned company, China General Nuclear Power Corp., was indicted in
2016 for conspiring to steal restricted nuclear technology from
Westinghouse.*
*China, the world’s biggest energy consumer, aims to nearly double its
nuclear power capacity by 2020, while also seeking to develop its own
next-generation reactors for export. The country has 21 reactors under
construction and another 179 either planned or proposed, far more than any
other nation, World Nuclear Association data shows **the U.S. is reportedly
discussing preventing Chinese investors from buying Westinghouse’s nuclear
business.*

*Alarmed that Chinese investors may try to buy Westinghouse Electric Co.’s
nuclear business, the Trump administration is trying to find a U.S. or
allied buyer for the company instead, Bloomberg reports.*

*Too secret to fail*

*The Trump administration is so alarmed that Chinese investors may try to
purchase Westinghouse Electric Co.’s nuclear business that U.S. officials
are trying to find an American or allied buyer for the company instead, two
people familiar with the matter said.*

*Cabinet members including Energy Secretary Rick Perry and Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin have discussed preventing Westinghouse’s purchase
by a Chinese-linked company, three U.S. officials said.*

*For years, Chinese entities have been interested in the nuclear reactor
builder, and the company has been a repeated target of Chinese espionage.
Westinghouse filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on March 29 and its
parent company Toshiba Corp. is seeking a buyer for its money-losing
reactor business.*

*American officials are worried that a buyer could be linked to China --
either directly or through an investment group with hidden Chinese backing
- and are taking extraordinary steps to prevent the company from falling
into Chinese hands.*

*Administration officials so far have examined three potential courses to
keep Westinghouse out of Chinese hands, said a person familiar with the
discussions. The government might block a sale to a Chinese buyer;
encourage an alternative bid from U.S. or friendly foreign investors; or
the government might invest in the company directly in return for an equity
stake, akin to the Obama administration bailout of U.S. automakers.*

*Nuclear Secrets*

*Among the chief concerns in the event of a Chinese purchase is the
disclosure of nuclear technological secrets that could be used for either
military or civilian purposes. The U.S. would almost certainly stop an open
Chinese bid for majority ownership of Westinghouse’s nuclear business
through its legal authority to regulate corporate acquisitions involving
sensitive national security technology, an administration official said.*

*President Donald Trump will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping for the
first time at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Thursday and Friday. A
second official said the Trump administration is preparing for
Westinghouse’s bankruptcy to come up in the talks. All of the officials
requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.*

*Westinghouse spokeswoman Sarah Cassella declined by email to comment late
Tuesday.*

*Toshiba, meanwhile, said it replaced Westinghouse Chairman Daniel Roderick
with Mamoru Hatazawa. Roderick resigned all posts at the U.S. unit,
according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be
identified because the details aren’t yet public.*

*Management Changed*

*The Japanese government also would oppose any effort to sell the
Westinghouse business to a Chinese buyer, according to people familiar with
the matter. Japanese officials have made that point clear to Toshiba
executives, one of the people said.*

*Perry, Mnuchin, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Commerce Secretary
Wilbur Ross are involved in discussions about how the administration would
address a sale of the business, the officials said.*

*Southern Co. CEO Thomas Fanning also has met with Perry and Tillerson to
discuss Westinghouse’s fate, according to a person familiar with the
discussions. The utility company has a stake in avoiding disruption of
Westinghouse’s operations because the company is building two nuclear
reactors for Southern subsidiary Georgia Power.*

*CFIUS Review*

*Any bid by Chinese investors would require approval by a panel known as
the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., which reviews foreign
acquisitions of U.S. companies for national security risks. Mnuchin chairs
the panel. *

*The committee, which includes the secretaries of the Treasury, Energy,
Defense, State and Commerce departments, can impose changes to transactions
or, in rare cases, recommend to the president that they be blocked. The
panel has a maximum 75 days to complete its review.*

*China was the leading source of investments reviewed by CFIUS from 2012 to
2014, accounting for almost a fifth, according to Rhodium Group, a private
research firm.*

*“By law, information filed with CFIUS may not be disclosed by CFIUS to the
public. Accordingly, we cannot comment on specific transactions, including
whether or not certain parties have filed notices for CFIUS review,” a
Treasury spokesman said.*

*A top Japanese government official has told Perry his government is
worried about Toshiba’s financial future if the conglomerate is unable to
sell Westinghouse’s reactor business, a U.S. official said.*

*U.S.-based venture capital firms with substantial ties to China have
generated concerns in Congress. Most recently, Republican Representative
Robert Pittenger of North Carolina wrote to the Treasury Department to
object to Canyon Bridge Capital Partners’ purchase of Lattice
Semiconductor, <https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/LSCC:US> a producer of U.S.
military applications and technology. The venture capital firm “appears to
be directly affiliated” with the Chinese government, Pittenger said in a
December letter.*

*Barack Obama blocked two Chinese deals when he was president: one for a
wind farm in Oregon and the other for the U.S. business of
Germany’s Aixtron SE <https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/AIXA:GY>, a
semiconductor supplier.*

*Westinghouse supplied the world’s first commercial pressurized water
reactor more than half a century ago in Pennsylvania. There are currently
more than 430 nuclear power stations globally, with about half based on
Westinghouse technology.*
*Troubled Acquisition*

*Toshiba bought Westinghouse for $5.4 billion in 2006. The company foresaw
rising demand for nuclear power in the U.S., U.K. and China. Instead,
natural gas became cheaper and the 2011 nuclear disaster in Fukushima,
Japan, further soured the public on nuclear energy. The Japanese
conglomerate has already lost $6 billion on the purchase.*

*Five Chinese military officials were indicted in absentia in 2014 for
allegedly stealing trade secrets from Westinghouse through computer hacks.
A state-owned company, China General Nuclear Power Corp.
<https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/CGNPCZ:CH>, was indicted in 2016 for
conspiring to steal restricted nuclear technology from Westinghouse.*

*China, the world’s biggest energy consumer, aims to nearly double
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/terminal/OIL3K06KLVRD> its nuclear power
capacity by 2020, while also seeking to develop its own next-generation
reactors for export. The country has 21 reactors under construction and
another 179 either planned or proposed, far more than any other nation,
World Nuclear Association data shows
<http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/facts-and-figures/world-nuclear-power-reactors-and-uranium-requireme.aspx>.*

*The report says cabinet members including Energy Secretary Rick Perry and
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin have discussed preventing Westinghouse’s
purchase by a Chinese-linked company. The report, which cites U.S.
officials, comes as President Donald Trump is preparing to host Chinese
President Xi Jinping at the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Thursday and
Friday. Bloomberg said the administration is preparing for Westinghouse to
come up during the meeting.*

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