Business News
In today’s business news: The prime minister says that a German nuclear phase-out could increase domestic energy prices by up to 30 percent, Czech airlines is to further cut its number of destinations along with its staff, the Swiss commodity giant Glencore is set to buy up the Czech food and chemicals conglomerate Setuza, more than half of all Czech households are not able to save any money, and two new wi-fi trams are being introduced in Prague.
Prime Minister speaks on consequences of German nuclear phase-out for Czech energy sector
Temelín nuclear power plant
Prime Minister Petr Nečas said on Wednesday that according to the Czech
government’s tentative estimates, a nuclear phase-out in neighboring
Germany could lead to an increase in electricity prices of up to 30
percent. He added that this would have a noticeable impact on the
country’s industry sector and its ability to compete with other
economies. Mr. Nečas stressed that this was only a preliminary estimate
for the year 2022, the year by which Germany plans to abandon nuclear power
entirely, and that it only would apply if the construction of two new
reactors at the Temelín plant would not yet have been completed. However,
when seven reactors that were built before 1980 were switched off in
Germany in March in a reaction to the nuclear disaster in the Japanese
Fukushima, Czech electricity prices rose by nearly ten percent.
Czech Airlines to further cut staff and limit destinations
Czech Airlines will continue cutting its expenses over the next two years.
Along with further reducing the number of its aircraft, the company will
also decrease its destinations from 60 to about 40 to 45. Czech Airlines
director Miroslav Dvořák said that these steps are being taken in order
to speed up the company’s effort to cut its debt. He added that the
measures will go hand in hand with cuts in staff; some 700 of the
company’s 1780 employees are expected to be made redundant or be
transferred to the newly formed sister company, Czech Aeroholding. Czech
Airlines will also expand its internet presence and sales.
Swiss commodity giant Glencore to buy up bankrupt Setuza
Photo: Jan Rosenauer
The Swiss company Glencore, the world's leading integrated producer and
marketer of commodities, will buy the Czech food and chemicals conglomerate
Setuza, the country’s biggest producer of food and chemicals. According
to the daily Mladá fronta Dnes, Glencore will buy up the bankrupt Setuza
for 1.12 billion Czech crowns, or about 45 million euro. Glencore will be
purchasing the company’s oil pressing plant in the north Bohemian Ústí
nad Labem, its Borsay oil refinery, and its real estate, as well as the
company’s registered trade mark Lukana Oil.
The government in 2007 accepted a settlement of 1.1 billion CZK from Setuza, which owed the state 4 billion CZK. Its former owners were linked to a number of controversial businessmen, including Tomáš Pitr, who was found guilty of large-scale tax fraud.
Over half of Czech households not able to save any money
According to a survey by Ipsos Tambor, 54 percent of Czechs are not able
to put aside any savings. Nearly half of all households in the Czech
Republic spend their entire income on living expenses and cannot save any
money at the end of the month. About a third is able to at least save 1000
crowns, about 40 euros, each month.
Only ten percent save 5000 crowns, or about 200 euros, every month. The
survey also revealed that those with a higher level of education are more
likely to save money or invest.
Nearly a half of those who do set aside savings do so in the form of
savings accounts, state-subsidized building savings accounts and similar
banking products. A fifth pay their savings into a regular checking account
and only about a tenth of the population invests in shares, bonds or
stocks.
Two new wi-fi trams to be added to Prague’s tram fleet
Photo: CTK
Two new trams offering free wireless internet will be operating in Prague
starting Friday. The cars, of the ForCity model produced by Škoda
Transportation, are marked with a Wi-Fi sticker and will be used on
numerous tram lines across the city. Information on where they are
currently in use is available online. Škoda Transportation plans to
introduce one more tram with free wireless internet in the next weeks. The
introduction of wireless internet on trams will be in a testing phase until
the end of the year; the company plans to assess the use of such trams by
the end of the year. The service is financed by ads for the company Rencar,
which sells advertisement space in Prague’s public transportation system.





