Scottish Daily Mail

Aussie bank splashes out £2bn on UK waste firm

As Macquarie is probed over National Grid deal . . .

- By Calum Muirhead

AUSTRALIAN investment bank Macquarie is set to take control of more of the UK’s key infrastruc­ture – despite being hauled in for questionin­g over its handling of Britain’s gas grid.

The Sydney-based firm, known as the ‘Vampire Kangaroo’ in the City, will snap up the UK business of

recycling group Suez from French group Veolia in a deal worth £2bn.

Veolia agreed to buy Suez, its archrival, for £11bn last year following a bitter takeover battle. In a bid to derail the merger, Suez’s management threatened to sell parts of the group while also putting up legal blocks.

The tie-up also drew scrutiny from the UK’s competitio­n regulators as Veolia and Suez are the biggest players in the waste management market.

The Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA) said in May that the merger risked increasing costs councils pay for rubbish collection by cutting the number of possible providers.

As a result, Veolia said yesterday it had agreed to sell Suez’s UK arm to Macquarie, but added it would remain ‘a major player’ in the British market.

But the sale of Suez’s UK business to Macquarie risks attracting controvers­y, as the private equity group faces renewed scrutiny about its handling of key parts of the UK’s infrastruc­ture.

It was reported over the weekend that the Government is drawing up plans for a probe into Macquarie’s £5.8bn swoop in March on a 60pc stake in National Grid’s gas transmissi­on and metering operation, a key part of the energy grid which maintains more than 4,000 miles of gas pipes.

The sale, which was expected to be completed in the second half of this year, has been called in for review under the National Security and Investment Act, which gives the Government the power to intervene in deals that raise national security concerns.

The importance of the infrastruc­ture is understood to be the main motive for the probe.

The review of the deal comes amid increased worries about the stability of the UK’s energy supply after the invasion of Ukraine

disrupted Russian oil and gas exports and sent prices of household bills surging.

Macquarie’s acquisitio­n of the Suez business will also worry many in the City because of its questionab­le track record of investing in some of Britain’s biggest firms. It earned its Vampire Kangaroo nickname after developing a reputation for buying companies, loading them with debt and sucking out money for shareholde­rs. The firm’s reputation was previously tarnished by its stewardshi­p of Thames Water. It sold the water company for around £1.4bn in 2017 after a decade of ownership during in which it paid out almost £3bn in dividends while amassing debts of £10bn, despite a complex-corporate structure meaning it paid almost no corporatio­n tax in the UK.

The sale also came months before the utility firm was prosecuted by environmen­tal regulators for extensivel­y polluting several rivers between 2012 and 2014.

Despite the debacle, Macquarie was allowed to wade back into the water market last year.

It snapped up a controllin­g stake in Southern Water, which supplies 4.7m customers across Sussex, Kent, Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, for over £1bn.

And with offices in the City, Macquarie has other strong links with the UK.

It is run by Shemara Wikramanay­ake (pictured), who was born in London to Sri Lankan parents and emigrated to Australia at the age of 13.

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