MaritimeNews ® 10-Июл-2015 16:22

Port of Piraeus
Denmark’s A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S will participate in the bidding process for two of the largest Greek ports – Piraeus and Thessaloniki – after the country’s Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras brought the sale of the ports on the table in today’s bailout proposal, Bloomberg reports.
The Syriza government took office in January partly on the promise to end austerity measures and stop a number of privatisations, including the sale of the state-owned ports.
The previous government led by Antonis Samaras had shortlisted five companies, including Cosco, for a 67% stake in the port of Piraeus, but the sale was scrapped by the newly elected leftist government led by Tsipras.
However, faced with the increasing pressure from the European Union and the International Monetary Fond, the Tsipras-led government today reportedly accepted to meet the majority of demands imposed by creditors, many of which were rejected in the recent referendum, for a EUR 53.5 billion bailout.
The binding bid dates for the two ports will be announced by end-October 2015 the latest, the proposal stated.
If selected, Maersk will operate the ports of Piraeus and Thessaloniki through its wholly-owned container terminal operator – APM Terminals.
World Maritime News Staff
-Source: worldmaritimenews.com
Для отправки сообщений необходимo включить JavaScript

Похожие темы

Greece Cedes to Tax Hikes
Royal Bank of Scotland Planning to Sell USD 5 Billion Greek Shipping Loan Portfolio
Shares of Greek Shipping Companies Take a Nosedive
Glencore’s Oil Export Deal in Libya Put to Question
China Orders Merger Between Two Biggest Shipping Companies
SIPG Approves USD 312 Million Stake Purchase in Jinjiang Shipping
Update: Lithuanian Shipping Company Dodges Bankruptcy
SeaLand and APL Choose Port Everglades
APM Terminals Buys Vado Ligure Reefer Terminal
Iran Ready to Unleash Its Tanker Fleet
  • Ответить

Текущее время: Сегодня 19:44

Часовой пояс: GMT + 3