Commission approves the restructuring of Austrian Airlines

Published: 28 August 2009 y., Friday

Lėktuvas
The Commission has today decided to close the formal investigation procedure into the privatisation and restructuring of Austrian Airlines concluding that the restructuring following its sale to Lufthansa is compatible with community law. The Commission has concluded that the price to be paid by Lufthansa involves State aid but that such aid is compatible in accordance with the Community framework for rescue and restructuring of firms in difficulty.

European Commission Vice-President and Commissioner for Transport Antonio Tajani said "This decision is yet another step taken favouring the consolidation of the airline sector. It will lead to a market that is undistorted by state aid, with an ultimate benefit for passengers."

Following a privatisation procedure Lufthansa has been selected to buy the Austrian State's stake (41.56%) in Austrian Airlines. The other shareholders (free floating and institutional) will also be bought out by Lufthansa. The price to be paid is made up of three elements:

Lufthansa will pay a purchase price of € 366.268,75

the State receives a debtor warrant, which may lead to an additional payment

Lufthansa has requested that Austria recapitalise Austrian Airlines with EUR 500 million to compensate for Austrian Airlines' high level of historical debt. Without the State recapitalisation Lufthansa will not buy Austrian Airlines.

Having opened an investigation into the sale and the restructuring plan 1 and having examined the evidence provided by Austria and the observations received from over 40 interested parties, the Commission has reached the conclusion that the (negative) price paid by Lufthansa for Austrian Airlines reflects the value of the enterprise at the time it was being sold. However, as bankruptcy would have been a cheaper option for the State the decision of Austria to accept a negative price amounted to a grant of State aid.

The Commission has therefore examined the restructuring plan submitted by the Austrian authorities and has concluded that this plan is in conformity with the applicable Community rules. The aid is kept to a minimum and a reduction in capacity combined with a cap on growth will be sufficient to address any competitive concerns raised by the acquisition. The capacity of Austrian airlines will be reduced by 15% from its January 2008 level by the end of 2010. Thereafter Austrian Airlines' growth will be capped at the average of the growth rate observed for member airlines of the Association of European Airlines. Such cap will remain in place until end 2015 or until Austrian Airlines reaches an operational break even, whichever comes first. Austrian Airlines will also reduce its shareholding in Schedule Coordination Austria GmbH to 25%.

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

BP pledges millions to Georgia in controversial pipeline project

British oil major BP is pledging millions of dollars to Georgia as part of the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline more »

Poles line up for shares in bank

Poles signed waiting lists Sunday for a chance to buy shares in their largest bank, using a signup system from communist times to impose order on the crush of interested investors more »

The Ceremony

"GLOBAL FINANCE": KOMERCIJALNA BANKA, BEST BANK IN MACEDONIA FOR 2004 more »

Gov't Stands Firm Over PKO BP Privatization

The Polish government did not bow to pressure following Parliament's resolution on Friday's declaring that foreign investors would be excluded from the privatization of bank PKO BP more »

RUSSIAN SKY MAY CLOSE FOR ARMENIAN PLANES

Russia may stop providing air navigation lines to the national airlines of CIS member countries, including Armenia, for their debts more »

Ex-Im Bank $180 Million Guarantee Backs U.S. Exports

A four-lane highway linking Romania westward to Hungary and the rest of Central Europe and eastward to the Black Sea will be built with the assistance of a $180 million loan guarantee from the Export-Import Bank more »

Lithuania chokes over use of euro

The Lithuanian government has written to the Dutch Presidency expressing outrage at a recent decision to standardise the word 'euro' across all EU languages more »

Kazakhstan announces plans to raise oil output

Kazakhstan plans to produce about 1.3m barrels (160,000 tons) of oil a day in 2005 more »

YUKOS pays most of its tax debt

The Russian oil company YUKOS has paid RUR 75bn (about $2.53bn) out of its RUR 99.4bn (about $3.4bn) tax debt for 2000 more »

Japan Allocates Grants for US$364,971 to Uzbekistan

Representatives of Japanese embassy in Uzbekistan will sign new grant contracts in Tashkent on 8 October more »