The deal
2009-12-01
To properly clean the Augean stables at ČEZ would require
throwing dozens of politicians, businessmen and civil servants
into prison. It seems unlikely that EU antitrust officials will go
this far, because of the political implications. The Czech
Establishment would take to the warpath against Brussels, and
President Václav Klaus would start a new round of anti-EU
agitation. Instead, EU officials will likely seek a deal that
achieves specific competition goals in the energy sector but that
fails to address some of the key underlying problems. Brussels
could impose a fine, require ČEZ to give up some of its reserved
grid capacity to Czech Coal, or enforce an asset swap between
the two rival companies. Brussels will probably stop short of
cracking open the all-powerful cartel that includes ČEZ, Appian,
Škoda Holding, Czech Railways and DP Praha. We probably won't
learn if Russian ownership at Appian/Škoda is the glue keeping
the cartel together. Simple consumers and taxpayers shouldn't
expect things on their level to change much.
[Czech Republic Dopravní podnik European Union]
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