Amsterdam Faces €400M Loss After Failed AEB Sale

Bankrupt waste-to-energy company AEB has caused a bigger loss for Amsterdam than expected. The city's large investment in AEB has gone up in flames. Four failed attempts to sell the company in five years led the municipality to keep the company and a big refinancing operation.

 

4 months Ago


Massive Loans and City Ownership
In order to stabilize AEB, the city converted a loan of 222.3 million euros into shares and secured a new loan for almost 180 million euros, most of which will be used to pay off debts to banks such as ABN Amro, ING, BNG Bank, and Deutsche Bank.

AEB also secured a loan of 21.

5 million euros to cover any cash flow problems without needing to constantly ask for municipal support.

AEB's latest annual report unveiled the extent of the city's full financial exposure. Now Amsterdam is the company's principal lender, and the company is still fragile financially.



For 2021, AEB expects to invest 73 million euros to comply with environmental regulations, after it had a net loss of 28.3 million euros, including a revenue of just short of 198 million euros in 2024. The company's equity is just 5.

8 percent of its balance sheet, propped up by a subordinated municipal loan.

Challenges to Long-Term Viability
The city's chance of recouping what it had invested in AEB hinged on a later sale of the utility, but that prospect is now attenuating. Nationwide policy is driving toward fewer but bigger waste processing centers, so AEB is lined up for expensive modernization or potential extinction.



The supervisory board emphasised that this included long-term contracts with the municipality to address these financial challenges.

Copyright @ 2024 IBRA Digital