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CANADA

Skanska nets windfall from Chile highway sale

Swedish construction and engineering group Skanska said Wednesday it would make a €556 million ($730 million) gain from the sale of a 50 percent share in a company that owns a Chilean highway concession.

Skanska nets windfall from Chile highway sale

Skanska said the buyer, Canada’s Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo), was acquiring the Skanska-owned Swedish holding companies that own the 50 percent stake in Autopista Central in Santiago, which is run as a public private partnership (PPP).

“The gain on sale after tax amounts to approximately 5.0 billion kronor ($730 million) and corresponds to a gain of 12 Swedish kronor per share in Skanska,” the company said in a statement.

Chief executive Johan Karlström called the investment in Autopista Central “Skanska’s most successful ever.”

“This deal gives a very good result for Skanska and our shareholders,” he said.

The announcement sent Skanska’s shares up 4.0 percent in early trading on the Stockholm Stock Exchange. Shortly after 10am, the company’s shares were up 3.44 percent to 135.5 kronor in a flat market.

Analyst Bengt Claesson at SEB called the announcement “good news,” saying the expected deal had come earlier than planned.

“It is positive that they announce it already now as the announcement was not expected until next year,” he told Dow Jones Newswires.

Skanska said the deal was conditional to approval from the bond guarantor and amendments to the financing agreements.

It said the gain would be recognised at the earliest in the second quarter in 2011.

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PROPERTY

Copenhagen nature area to be developed as city approves land sale

A part of the Amager Fælled nature area has lost its reserve status and can now be sold to investors, after a majority in the city's municipal council voted in favour of development on Thursday.

Copenhagen nature area to be developed as city approves land sale
Amager Fælled. File photo: Asger Ladefoged/Ritzau Scanpix

The 219,000 square-kilometre area, known as Lærkesletten, can be sold to developers who wish to build homes on the land, broadcaster TV2 reported.

The sale raises money needed by the city to pay for the new Metro lines, which opened last year, and was part of a political deal agreed in 2017.

City councillors from the Social Democrats, Social Liberals, Liberals, Conservatives, Danish People's Party and two independents voted in favour, while Red-Green Alliance, Alternative and Independent Green parties and one independent opposed.

Located on the southern edge of the natural area on island Amager, the area is frequently used by people from the city for cycling, running and walking.

“We have seen that nature and the environment are at the centre of the public’s perception of what’s important. They want real wild nature in Denmark,” Gorm Anker Gunnarsen, who represents the Red-Green Alliance on the city council, told news agency Ritzau.

An Epinion survey this week showed that 76 percent of people who live in Copenhagen are either partly or completely against development of the area.

Gunnarsen told Ritzau he still believes there is a chance of preserving the nature zone.

“We have the authority to withdraw a building permit in special circumstances,” he said.

An advisory public vote could on the matter provide the basis for this, he argued.

“This case will not then just rest on which party you are with, but also on your view of the individual case,” he said.

READ ALSO: Copenhagen natural area Amager Fælled gets new development plan

 

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