
A timely contribution and incisive analysis, this is the story of the British experiment in privatizing the nuclear power industry and its subsequent financial collapse. It tells how the UK's pioneering role in nuclear power led to bad technology choices, a badly flawed restructuring of the electricity industry and the end of government support for nuclear power.In this volume Simon Taylor has combined interviews with former executives, regulators and analysts with his own unique insight into the nuclear industry to provide an analysis of the origins of the crisis and the financial and corporate strategies used by British Energy plc.Arguing that the stock market was a major factor in the company's collapse by misunderstanding its finances, over-valuing the shares and giving wrong signals to management and that the government policy of trying to put all responsibility for nuclear liabilities in the hands of the private sector was neither credible nor realistic. The book concludes that failure was not inevitable but resulted from a mixture of internal and external causes that casts doubt on the policy of combining a wholly nuclear generator with liberalized power markets.This book will be of great interest to students engaged with the history of nuclear power in the UK, privatization, regulation and financial and corporate strategy, as well as experts, policy makers and strategists in the field.
This book investigates the systemic failures and financial mismanagement that precipitated the collapse of British Energy plc in 2002. Simon Taylor, an expert in energy industry strategy, utilizes a combination of primary source interviews with key industry figures and a rigorous analysis of corporate financial records to challenge the viability of privatizing nuclear power within a liberalized electricity market. He argues that the collapse was a result of flawed government policy, unrealistic liability expectations, and a stock market that fundamentally misread the company's financial health.
What You Will Find
Experts and academics in the field of energy policy identify this work as a foundational case study on the risks of privatizing critical infrastructure. Readers frequently note the technical density of the financial analysis, which provides a clear, evidence-based critique of the British energy market restructuring.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2007-01-01
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Group
ISBN-10:
0203946278
ISBN-13:
9780203946275
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