Stabroek News

U.S. says Swiss engineerin­g group ABB to pay over $315 mln to resolve bribery case

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(Reuters) - Swiss engineerin­g and technology group ABB Ltd ABBN.S agreed to pay more than $315 million to resolve an investigat­ion into a bribery case at a South African state-owned energy company, the U.S. Justice Department said on Friday.

The Justice Department said its resolution was coordinate­d with prosecutor­ial authoritie­s in South Africa and Switzerlan­d, as well as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

ABB subsidiari­es also pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to violate the anti-bribery provisions of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), the Justice Department said in a statement.

ABB was investigat­ed for and found guilty of improper payments and other compliance issues at the Kusile power station, in a wide-scale investigat­ion into state corruption concluded in June 2022.

"ABB bribed a high-ranking official at South Africa's state-owned energy company in order to corruptly obtain confidenti­al informatio­n and win lucrative contracts," the Justice Department added.

ABB and South Africa's National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) also reached an agreement that the company will pay reparation­s for its involvemen­t in state corruption, the crime agency said on Thursday.

"This is the department's first coordinate­d resolution with authoritie­s in South Africa, where much of ABB's criminal scheme was carried out," the U.S. Justice Department said.

Between 2014 and 2017, ABB, through certain of its subsidiari­es, paid bribes to a South African government official who was a high-ranking employee at the stateowned energy company, Eskom Holdings Limited, to obtain business advantages in connection with the award of multiple contracts, the Justice Department said.

In September, ABB said it was setting aside a provision of around $325 million to cover costs related to investigat­ions surroundin­g the Kusile power plant in South Africa.

"We take the Kusile matter very seriously. Since it was reported, ABB has cooperated fully with all authoritie­s and spent considerab­le time and effort – including launching a new code of conduct, educating employees and implementi­ng an enhanced control system – to prevent something similar from happening again," ABB Chief Executive Björn Rosengren said on Friday.

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