Toronto Star

Alstom’s Bombardier rail takeover wins conditiona­l EU approval

Transactio­n remains ‘subject to further regulatory approvals’

- AOIFE WHITE AND STEPHANIE BODONI

Alstom SA won conditiona­l European Union approval for its 6.2 billion euro ($9.8-billion) takeover of Bombardier Inc.’s rail-transport business. The European Commission said Alstom’s offer to sell train production plants and exit a high-speed train project eliminated potential concerns about the deal, which creates the world’s second-biggest maker of train-related supplies after China’s CRRC Corp.

“Thanks to the comprehens­ive remedies offered to solve the competitio­n concerns in the areas of very high-speed, mainline trains and mainline signaling, the commission has been able to speedily review and approve this transactio­n,” EU Antitrust Commission­er Margrethe Vestager said in an emailed statement on Friday.

Alstom offered this month to divest its regional Coradia Polyvalent train and Reichshoff­en production site in France. It also promised to transfer Bombardier’s contributi­on to the V300 ZEFIRO very high-speed train and sell off the Bombardier TALENT 3 platform and dedicated production facilities located within the Hennigsdor­f site in Germany.

The package includes providing rivals with access to certain interfaces and products for some of Bombardier Transporta­tion’s signaling on-board units and train control management systems. ‘Significan­tly improved’ The final commitment­s address EU antitrust concerns “and were significan­tly improved following the feedback received by market participan­ts,” the Brussels-based commission said.

The EU approval is based on full compliance with these remedies.

Alstom and Bombardier said they welcomed the commission’s decision. The transactio­n “remains subject to further regulatory approvals in several other jurisdicti­ons and customary closing conditions” and the “closing of the acquisitio­n is expected for the first half of 2021,” they said in a statement. Juergen Kerner, a board member of German labor union IG Metall responsibl­e for the railway industry, said the EU’s approval is only the beginning. “Jobs and locations must be secured, participat­ion and tariff standards must be preserved,” he said. “For this, Alstom-Bombardier has to present a future concept.”

Alstom chief executive officer

Henri Poupart-Lafarge told French lawmakers last week that the deal was “on a good path” toward approval. He said it was too early to name a buyer for Alstom’s Reichshoff­en plant, which it has offered to sell. CRRC would not be buying it, he said.

Alstom’s separate attempt to merge its rail operations with Siemens AG ran into an EU veto last year. Regulators blamed the companies for not making concession­s that fully addressed worries about the combined firm’s power over railway signaling systems and the next generation of very-high-speed trains.

 ?? SIMON DAWSON BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO ?? The European Commission said Alstom’s offer to sell train production plants and exit a high-speed train project eliminated potential concerns about the deal to buy Bombarder’s rail arm.
SIMON DAWSON BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO The European Commission said Alstom’s offer to sell train production plants and exit a high-speed train project eliminated potential concerns about the deal to buy Bombarder’s rail arm.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada