SCANA Corp (>> SCANA Corporation) and its partner, state-owned utility Santee Cooper, said Toshiba will make the payments in installments beginning in October and ending in September 2022.

Toshiba's Westinghouse Electric Co filed for bankruptcy in March, overwhelmed by the cost overruns at the VC Summer plant in South Carolina and a similar unfinished nuclear project known as Vogtle in Georgia. The projects are years behind schedule.

The agreement allows Toshiba and its Westinghouse unit to exit the nuclear construction business and caps Toshiba's liability for guaranteeing that Westinghouse complete the VC Summer contract.

Toshiba reached a similar agreement for $3.7 billion in June with the utilities, led by a unit of Southern Co (>> Southern Co), that own the Vogtle project.

Toshiba has warned that losses from Westinghouse threaten its future and it is considering bids for its flash memory chip unit, worth around $18 billion, to raise capital.

The owners of the VC Summer project said on Thursday they expect the cost of completing the project will "materially exceed" Westinghouse's estimates and the payments due from Toshiba. They said they hope to decide soon whether they will continue with the two projects, modify them or abandon them.

Westinghouse is expected to deliver this week a five-year business plan to its lender, an affiliate of Apollo Global Management (>> Apollo Global Management LLC). That plan will help shape bids for Westinghouse, which has attracted the interest of U.S. private equity firms.

As part of that plan, Westinghouse is expected to reach an agreement with SCANA under which it will continue to provide engineering and other services. Westinghouse has a similar agreement in place with the owners of the Vogtle plant.

Westinghouse asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, New York, on Wednesday to give it until Dec. 6 to file a plan of reorganization. The company said it needed more time in part due to talks with SCANA.

The request will be heard by the court on Sept. 7.

The Georgia and South Carolina plants were the first new nuclear power projects in the United States in three decades.

However, the projects have been dogged by design problems, disagreements with regulators and poor quality work by Westinghouse's partners.

(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by Dan Grebler)

By Tom Hals