EU executive prohibits merger between Siemens, Alstom
Xinhua
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BRUSSELS, Feb. 6 (Xinhua) -- The European Commission said on Wednesday that it has prohibited Siemens' proposed acquisition of Alstom under the European Union (EU) Merger Regulation, because the merger would have harmed competition in markets for railway signalling systems and very high-speed trains. 

The takeover would have combined Siemens' and Alstom's transport equipment and service activities in a new company fully controlled by Siemens. It would have brought together the two largest suppliers of various types of railway and metro signalling systems, as well as of rolling stock in Europe, both also with leading positions globally. 

The executive branch of the EU said the merger would have created the undisputed market leader in some signalling markets and a dominant player in very high-speed trains.

It would have significantly reduced competition in both these areas, depriving customers, including train operators and rail infrastructure managers, of a choice of suppliers and products, said the Commission.

The Commission received several complaints during its in-depth investigation, from customers, competitors, industry associations and trade unions. It also received negative comments from several National Competition Authorities in the European Economic Area. 

Stakeholders were worried that the proposed transaction would significantly harm competition and reduce innovation in signalling systems and very high-speed rolling stock, leading to the foreclosure of smaller competitors and to higher prices and less choice for customers, said the Commission.  

The merger was seen by some in Europe as trying to creating a counterweight with China's CRRC, the world's largest supplier of rail transit equipment. 

But the Chinese envoy to the EU had said he has "no worries" over Siemens-Alstom merger.

Zhang Ming, head of the Chinese Mission to the EU, said in late January that "in a market economy, we have cooperation and we also have competition. So we do not reject competition." 

"Our world provides a very big global market. There is not simply one single player like Alstom, Siemens or the CRRC. We need to cooperate together and compete together so as to provide better services to the whole world," Zhang said at the time. 

Top file photo: German ICE train manufacturing company Siemens President and CEO, Joe Kaeser (L) and French railway transport company Alstom CEO, Henri Poupart-Lafarge speak during a press conference announcing the union between French railway transport company Alstom and Siemens on September 27, 2017. /VCG