THE STATE can assume control over a 100-percent share in the Slovenský Plynárenský Priemysel (SPP) gas utility after receiving approval from the Antimonopoly Office (PMÚ). The office stated that the purchase of the remaining minority package from Energetický a Průmyslový Holding (EPH) will not violate the principles of market competition, the SITA newswire reported on February 4.
The PMÚ also had no problem with the state controlling the subsidiaries of SPP, like SPP Foundation, Ecofund, SPP CNG and SPP CZ. The decision, however, is not valid yet.
The state, which owns a 51-percent stake in SPP, still has to state whether it will acquire the remaining shares from EPH by the end of June. The original deadline was the end of 2013. Economy Minister Tomáš Malatinský told SITA in December that the state still needs to negotiate better terms for deliveries of gas from Russian Gazprom. Moreover, it has to resolve problems with the gas reserves.
The Slovak government green-lighted the takeover of the 49-percent stake and managerial control in SPP from the EPH in September 2013. In exchange, the government will take over half of the company’s debt, €59 million, from EPH.
EPH, controlled at the time by Czech entrepreneur Daniel Křetínský and Petr Kellner and the Slovak financial group J&T, acquired the minority share in January 2013 from E.ON and GDF Suez for €2.6 billion.
Source: SITA
For more information about this story please see: State will decide over SPP purchase by June 2014
Compiled by Radka Minarechová from press reports
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