Creditors give Spain’s Abengoa 7 months’ grace

(FILES) A picture taken on November 27, 2015 shows solar power towers at Abengoa solar plant in Sanlucar La Mayor. One of the world's biggest renewable energy firms, Spain's Abengoa, said March 28, 2016 it had been given a seven-month breathing space by its creditors for restructuring that should stave off the threat of immediate bankruptcy. Shares in Spain's Abengoa went into free fall on November 26, 2015 after it emerged the renewable energy giant is close to bankruptcy following years of unsustainable expansion. / AFP / CRISTINA QUICLER / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - NO ARCHIVES

Madrid / AFP

One of the world’s biggest renewable energy firms, Spain’s Abengoa, said on Monday it had been given a seven-month breathing space by its creditors for restructuring that should stave off the threat of immediate bankruptcy.
The company ended 2015 with a debt of €9.4 billion, which it hopes to slim to €4.9 billion. It announced in November that it was filing for preliminary protection from creditors and had been given a March 28 deadline to strike a deal with at least 60 percent of its debt-holders.
Under the “standstill” deal announced on Monday, 75.04 percent of creditors agreed to the grace period. In parallel, the company plans to file for Chapter 11 protection from creditors for its affiliates in the US.
“This (is a) key step in the restructuring process of Abengoa and will permit the company to complete the Financial Viability Plan that has already been accepted by lenders in order to stabilise business and protect its leadership in the energy and environmental sectors,” the company said.
Abengoa, which employed 28,700 people worldwide in 2015, wants to refocus on core activities.
A family-owned company founded 75 years ago, Abengoa rose from being a local electrical firm, fixing installations damaged in Spain’s 1936-39 civil war, to a major player in solar energy and other renewables.
But risky bets on biofuels, Spain’s cuts to renewable energy subsidies during an economic downturn and the Benjumea family’s refusal to raise capital out of fear of losing control of the company pushed it to the edge of bankruptcy.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend