French utility Veolia has the financial firepower to make a multi-billion euro acquisition, its chief executive said. The firm’s biggest domestic rival, Suez, announced the $3.4 billion purchase of GE Water from General Electric in March. Asked whether Veolia could spend as much on an acquisition, its boss Antoine Frerot told Reuters the size of the group’s balance sheet “would allow it”.
Frerot, who earlier this year said he would favor organic growth for the business, laid out two conditions for any future large acquisition.
“It would need to create new large-size activities for the company and over a long period of at least 10 to 15 years,” Frerot said in an interview at a business conference in the southeastern city of Aix-en-Provence.
“If we found this, then obviously we’d have the means to do it,” he said, declining to elaborate on possible targets.
Veolia, which also cleans up nuclear facilities and treats low- and intermediate-level radioactive waste, could also benefit from a 50-billion-euro ($57 billion) upgrade of French nuclear sites operated by energy provider EDF, Frerot said. EDF’s upgrade is scheduled for 2014-2025 and aims to extend the life expectancy of its nuclear installations by more than 40 years.
The comment comes a few days after government officials announced their intention to cut to 50% the proportion of nuclear energy in total electricity production in the country.