Item 1.02 TERMINATION OF A MATERIAL DEFINITIVE AGREEMENT
The Engineering, Procurement and Construction Agreement dated May 23, 2008, as amended (the “EPC Contract”) was by and between South Carolina Electric & Gas Company (“SCE&G”), for itself and as agent for the South Carolina Public Service Authority (“Santee Cooper”) (collectively "Owner"), and a consortium consisting of Westinghouse Electric Company, LLC ("WEC") and Stone & Webster, Inc. (which later became WECTEC Global Project Services, Inc. ("WECTEC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of WEC) (collectively, the "Contractor"). On May 30, 2008, SCANA Corporation, SCE&G's parent company (the “Company”), and SCE&G filed a Current Report on Form 8-K, Item 1.01, Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement to disclose the EPC Contract.
On August 1, 2018, the Modified Second Amended Joint Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization, filed by WEC and WECTEC, in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (the "Reorganization Plan") became effective. In connection with the effectiveness of the Reorganization Plan, the EPC Contract was deemed to be rejected. As a result, the Company and SCE&G are disclosing the termination of the EPC Contract in this Current Report. The rejection of the EPC Contract did not result in early termination penalties for SCE&G or the Company.
Under the terms of the EPC Contract, the Contractor was to provide design, engineering, procurement and construction services for two 1,117-megawatt nuclear electric-generating units ("Unit 2" and "Unit 3") (collectively the "Project") to be constructed at the site of V. C. Summer Nuclear Station located in Jenkinsville, South Carolina. Among other things, the EPC Contract provided for guaranteed substantial completion dates of Unit 2 and Unit 3 of August 31, 2019 and 2020, respectively; set forth certain delay-related liquidated damages computation requirements, including those related to the eligibility of the Units to earn Internal Revenue Code Section 45J production tax credits; established caps for those aggregate liquidated damages; provided for payment to the Contractor of a completion bonus for each Unit placed in service by the deadline to qualify for production tax credits; provided for the development of a revised construction payment milestone schedule; and provided for the Owner to waive and cancel a certain guaranty with respect to the Project and for Toshiba Corporation, WEC’s parent company, to reaffirm its guaranty of WEC’s payment obligations. In addition, the EPC Contract provided the Owner with an irrevocable option, which the Owner subsequently exercised, to fix the total amount to be paid to the Contractor for its entire scope of work on the Project (excluding a limited amount of work within the time and materials component of the contract price) after June 30, 2015 at $6.082 billion (SCE&G’s 55% portion being approximately $3.345 billion). This total amount to be paid was to be subject to adjustment for amounts paid since June 30, 2015. Upon the exercise of this option, the aggregate delay-related liquidated damages amount referred to above was capped at $338 million per Unit (SCE&G’s 55% portion being approximately $186 million per Unit), and the completion bonus amounts referred to above were to have been $150 million per Unit (SCE&G’s 55% portion being approximately $83 million per Unit).
Certain material relationships between SCE&G and other parties to the EPC Contract continue as follows. SCE&G and Santee Cooper jointly own, and SCE&G is the operator for, V. C. Summer Nuclear Station Unit 1. In addition, SCE&G, for itself and as agent for Santee Cooper, and WEC are parties to a fuel alliance agreement and contracts for fuel fabrication and related services. Under these contracts, SCE&G supplies enriched products to WEC and WEC supplies nuclear fuel assemblies for Unit 1.