Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Why is a Polish oil company building up a media empire?

Polish oil concern Orlen's CEO Daniel Obajtek may be a man to watch when Jaroslaw Kaczynski departs the political stage. Sigma Bis, a media house partly owned by his company, seems to lie at the heart of his strategy.

-

Since the Law and Justice (PiS) party won the Polish parliament­ary election in 2019, there has been an intense power struggle within the party itself and between it and its two smaller United Right coalition partners. The coalition may be reaching a moment of decision.

Perhaps the best way of understand­ing the direction in which PiS is going is to observe the jostling for position in stateowned firms between key factions in PiS and the coalition.

Of particular importance is the fate of Zbigniew Ziobro, justice minister and nationalis­t leader of smaller coalition partner United Poland (SP). His star seems to be waning after a series of scuffles with Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and PiS party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski.

Ziobroists — friends and family of the justice minister — were liberally afforded plum jobs across the state-owned sector after 2015, but since the EU summit earlier in December, from which Morawiecki emerged politicall­y enhanced, the prime minister has been removing Ziobro allies from state-owned companies.

Oil's where it's at

The CEO of Poland's largest oil firm Orlen, Daniel Obajtek, meanwhile, is emerging as a beneficiar­y in this jockeying for positionas his firm expands its role on the media market.

In July 2017, Kaczynski announced that after changes to the judiciary, his next goal would be to "repolonize" media own

ership, a euphemism for squeezing private media critical of the government and reinforcin­g media supportive of PiS's national conservati­ve project.

"PiS wants to take control over all available media and to use public money to spread their propaganda," Roman Giertych, a minister in the first PiS coalition government in 2005-07, told DW.

Since coming to power in 2015, this government has sought to strangle independen­t print media outlets, such as Gazeta Wyborcza, Politykaan­d Newsweek Polskaby restrictin­g public advertisin­g.

According to Kantar Media data, during the first seven months of 2017, Gazeta Wyborczare­ceived € 460,000 ($500,000) in advertisin­g revenue from state companies and ministries. For the same period in 2018, the amount fell to about $55,000.

Some suggest the PiS is moving in the direction of Fidesz in Hungary or the AKP in Turkey. "Corruption and state capitalism are integral to the project," Jacek Rostowski, former Polish finance minister, told DW. "Morawiecki is also a believer in state capitalism, perhaps a slightly cleaner version, but the model applies to him also. First you nationaliz­e the banks, then set up companies through which friendly

banks funnel cheap credits. Then you buy up media and push your own political views. This is systemic and intentiona­l," Rostowski said.

Orlen: The power behind the power

The preferred channel, if Rostowski's analysis holds water, seems to be Orlen, Poland's largest oil concern. And Orlen's preferred channel, in turn, is Sigma Bis.

At the end of 2019, the CEO set up the media house as part of its goal of diversifyi­ng away from energy and moving into the media sector. According to its 2030 strategy, Orlen plans to allocate 70 billion zlotys (€16 billion, $18 billion) to investment­s in new business sectors and increase its margins on nonfuel sales by 50%, reducing its vulnerabil­ity to declining demand for traditiona­l fuels and price fluctuatio­ns.

The process intensifie­d this winter after the company finalized the acquisitio­n of press distributo­r Ruch on November 24 and on December 7 announced the purchase of publisher Polska Press, gaining in the latter acquisitio­n access to 17.4 million users of internet portals, as well as readers of Dziennik Baltycki, Polska The TimesandDz­iennik Polska.

Access to Facebook Pixel software will enable the company to create databases on the website's users for targeted advertisin­g.

"Orlen has no plans to take over other media. We are focusing on the developmen­t of assets supporting sales, which are already functionin­g, or, as announced, will be part of the Orlen Group, i.e. Sigma Bis, Ruch and Polska Press Group," Orlen said in a press release.

Online news site Onet.plannounce­d last week that Orlen is mulling taking over Gremi Media, in whose portfolio are two of the most respected dailies in Poland, Rzeczpospo­litaand Parkiet.

"Obajtek is a real dark horse on the Polish political scene," Robert Tomaszewsk­i at Polityka Insight, a Warsaw-based think tank, told DW. "He is building up his power in the state-owned companies and could well be the one to replace Morawiecki if or when he goes."

Sigma Bis from nowhere

Sigma Bis only started operating at the end of 2019 after gaining approval from the consumer protection office. Orlen has 66% of the company's shares, and PZU, the largest Polish insurer, has 34%. Within its first year in existence, it is already a major player in the Polish media market.

This has had contradict­ory effects. Jakub Bierzynski, CEO of rival media group OMD, for example, says Sigma Bis is a political creation and as such will not survive changes on the political scene. Some managers from other media agencies are reportedly wary of working at Sigma Bis, fearing that a possible change of government in three years would see the company disappear.

"I am not surprised that people do not want to associate their future with such a seasonal

company," he told online news website Wirtualnem­edia.pl.

However, other heads of rival media agencies believe the new boss, Marcin Dec, gives Sigma Bis some credibilit­y on the market.

"Dec is a media person — a long time in the industry so knows the market from different perspectiv­es very well," Malgorzata Wegierek, CEO of the Havas Media Group Poland, told DW. "There are other media people in the management Board, so it seems that they are equipped and have resources on the top. In all aspects it looks like Sigma Bis will become the media agency for all or most stateowned companies."

In November, Energa started cooperatio­n with Sigma Bis, after it took on the media services of Orlen. In September, PZU became a client and from 2021, PZU's Link4 will join up too. It is rumored that Sigma Bis may soon take on Alior Bank and Poczta Polska as clients. The big step would be into the private sector, with rumors suggesting Polish producer FoodCare will become a client.

"The example of Sigma Bis clearly shows that there is more space for nonnetwork Polish media houses, which can successful­ly compete with internatio­nal network corporatio­ns," Goralska said. Watch that space.

 ??  ?? The CEO of Orlen, Daniel Obajtek, is aiming to expand his firm's role on the media market
The CEO of Orlen, Daniel Obajtek, is aiming to expand his firm's role on the media market
 ??  ?? A fuel station of Poland's largest oil company, Orlen
A fuel station of Poland's largest oil company, Orlen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany