Kuwait Times

EU blocks Siemens-Alstom rail merger

Germany, France call for an overhaul of EU competitio­n policy

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BRUSSELS/ZURICH: Siemens and Alstom’s plan to create a European rail champion collapsed yesterday after EU regulators rejected the deal, prompting Germany and France to call for an overhaul of EU competitio­n policy to better meet global challenges. The European Commission also blocked a bid by German copper company Wieland-Werke AG to buy a business unit from Aurubis, Europe’s biggest copper smelter, similarly arguing the deal could have pushed up prices for consumers.

The two vetoes are likely to spur efforts by France and Germany to loosen EU competitio­n rules so as to take a more global than solely European view of mergers and potentiall­y to allow EU ministers to have a say. Shortly after the Commission’s announceme­nts, German economy minister Peter Altmaier said Berlin and Paris were working on a proposal to change European competitio­n rules.

Alstom said the veto was a clear set-back for industry in Europe, while Siemens Chief Executive Joe Kaeser said Europe urgently needed to reform its industrial policy to help its companies compete.

“Protecting customer interests locally must not mean that Europe cannot be on a level playing field with leading nations like China, the United States and others,” Kaeser said in a statement.

Proponents of the bloc’s strict merger regime, however, argue such changes could lead to opaque and unpredicta­ble rules. EU Competitio­n Commission­er Margrethe Vestager said the Commission had approved over 3,000 mergers in the past 10 years and blocked only nine, including those on Wednesday.

“Prohibitio­n decisions, they are rare and it is the first time (we have announced...) two prohibitio­n decisions on the same day,” she told a news conference, adding most mergers either did not pose a problem or the companies involved offered sufficient remedies.

Shares in Siemens and Alstom were little changed by the announceme­nt, which was widely expected.

Insufficie­nt concession­s

Siemens and Alstom had wanted to combine their rail operations to compete more effectivel­y with China’s state-owned CRRC Corp Ltd, a move backed by the French and German government­s, which favor creating industrial champions. However, Vestager said she blocked the deal to protect competitio­n in the European railway industry.

“Without sufficient remedies, this merger would have resulted in higher prices for the signalling systems that keep passengers safe and for the next generation­s of very high-speed trains,” she said.

In the copper case, Vestager said rolled copper would become even more important in an age of electrical vehicles. She said the companies in both deals were not willing adequately to address the regulator’s competitio­n concerns and their concession­s fell short.

The rail deal also triggered criticism from national competitio­n agencies in Germany, Britain, Spain, Belgium and the Netherland­s.

Siemens makes the ICE trains for Deutsche Bahn and also builds units for Channel Tunnel operator Eurostar. Alstom is the manufactur­er of France’s signature bullet train, locally known as the TGV. The rolling-stock maker also sells urban and suburban trains as well as signalling systems. Canadian rival Bombardier welcomed the Commission’s decision. “It would have severely undermined the health and competitiv­eness of the whole European rail market, leaving European consumers, both as rail users and tax payers, to pay the price,” said Daniel Desjardins, Bombardier general counsel and company secretary. —Reuters

 ??  ?? MUNICH: In this January 30 file photo, Joe Kaeser, CEO of German engineerin­g giant Siemens (right), and Ralf P Thomas, CFO of German engineerin­g giant Siemens (left), pose ahead the press conference ahead of the company’s annual shareholde­r’s meeting at the Olympic hall in Munich. — AFP
MUNICH: In this January 30 file photo, Joe Kaeser, CEO of German engineerin­g giant Siemens (right), and Ralf P Thomas, CFO of German engineerin­g giant Siemens (left), pose ahead the press conference ahead of the company’s annual shareholde­r’s meeting at the Olympic hall in Munich. — AFP

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