Germany Demands More Payments From Uniper For Crisis Bailout
(Bloomberg) -- Germany is demanding higher repayments from nationalized energy company Uniper SE for a bailout in 2022, as the state tries to plug a hole in its budget.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Boston’s Broke and Broken Transit System Hurts Downtown Recovery
A Floating Island in Baltimore Raises Hope for a Waterfront Revival
Uniper will have to pay €2.9 billion ($3.2 billion) to the government, that’s €300 million more than initially planned, according to a release from the Federal Press Office. Uniper said it had set aside €2.3 billion earlier this year to pay to the government and further increased its provisions in June.
“The increase is solely the result of better expectations for Uniper’s results in 2024,” a company spokesman said, adding that the payment will be due at the end of March 2025. The exact amount will depend on full-year earnings.
Germany stepped in to rescue Uniper after Moscow invaded Ukraine and curtailed gas shipments to the continent. The rescue package was one of the largest in German corporate history, but the company is required to pay back the money as part of a “claw-back” mechanism set up by the European Union.
Earlier this month, the utility said it was able to offset roughly €540 million for canceled payment obligations to Russia’s Gazprom PJSC against damages it is owed for gas that hasn’t been delivered.
(Adds company statement in third paragraph.)
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
Inside Worldcoin’s Orb Factory, Audacious and Absurd Defender of Humanity
Surgeons Cut a Giant Tumor Out of My Head. Is There a Better Way?
Singapore's Wooden Building of the Future Has a Mold Problem
New Breed of EV Promises 700 Miles per Charge (Just Add Gas)
There’s a Gender Split in How US College Grads Are Tackling a More Difficult Job Market
©2024 Bloomberg L.P.