Daily Express

Rolls caught in bribery claims

- By David Shand City Editor

ROLLS- Royce yesterday sought to head off reputation­al damage adding to a worsening business outlook after it was dragged into a corruption scandal engulfing Brazilian energy giant Petrobras.

The FTSE 100 aircraft engines maker reiterated its zero- tolerance approach to wrongdoing after it was named by a former executive of Brazilian state oil company Petrobras as having paid bribes there, according to reports.

The detail emerged from among hundreds of pages of documents released this month by Brazil’s federal court system. It is alleged that Rolls, which makes gas turbines for Petrobras oil platforms, paid bribes via an agent in exchange for a $ 100million contract.

Court details reportedly showed Petrobras informant Pedro Barusco, who has been giving informatio­n as part of a plea bargain struck when he was arrested last year, received at least $ 200,000 from Rolls.

A spokespers­on for Rolls, led by chief executive John Rishton ( pictured), said: “We have not received details of the allegation­s made in recent press reports, nor have we been approached by the authoritie­s in Brazil.

“We have always been clear we will not tolerate improper business conduct of any sort and will take all necessary action to ensure compliance, including co- operating with authoritie­s in any country.”

The festering corruption scandal at Petrobras, which has led to billions of pounds of suspect transactio­ns being uncovered by police, recently forced the resignatio­n of its chief executive along with fi ve senior directors.

Rolls is already under investigat­ion by the UK’s Serious Fraud Offi ce over alleged malpractic­e in China and Indonesia after an independen­t investigat­ion commission­ed by the company turned up “matters of concern”.

Last Friday the company, which sounded two profi t alerts in 2014 partly as government­s cut defence spending, posted its fi rst fall in underlying revenue for a decade along with an 8 per cent drop in pre- tax profi t and warned its annual profi t could be 13 per cent lower than the previous year due to the impact of weaker oil prices.

Rolls is undergoing its biggest jobs cut programme in six years, shedding 2,600 staff from its 55,000 global workforce over the next year or so in a bid to bring down its annual costs by £ 80million.

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