PRAGUE — Czech power group CEZ threw out? Areva's bid for a multibillion-dollar contract to expand the Temelin nuclear power plant, leaving Russian and U.S. firms to contest the country's biggest-ever energy deal.
CEZ,? which is central Europe's largest company and has a market value of $20 billion, said? Areva? failed to meet "crucial requirements" in the tender to double the size of the 2,000-megawatt plant with two new units.
Media outlets have said the deal will be worth $10 billion or more, although majority-state-owned CEZ has never put a price on it.
Areva's disqualification now leaves? Toshiba's U.S. unit Westinghouse and? Russia's? Atomstroiexport? as the only bidders, pending an appeal by the French company.
The Czech nuclear energy push has run into opposition in neighboring? Austria? and? Germany, but it is the cornerstone of a government drive to secure the country's energy future.
Russia is already a major supplier of oil, gas and nuclear fuel for the country of 10.5 million, giving CEZ a stark choice between East and West in the tender. A winner should be picked by the end of next year.
The? Czech Republic? has been a member of the? European Union? since 2004. A few years ago, it tentatively agreed to house part of a U.S. missile defense system, a move that irked? Russia.
Fears over? Russia's influence are strong in the central European nation.