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Sumitomo Electric will acquire 90% of the shares of Südkabel, a 120 year old cable manufacturer Mannheim, in order to fully localize the production and construction of high voltage direct current cable systems in Germany. The acquisition process is currently expected to be completed as of October 1st this year, subject to regulatory approvals.
Two major HVDC cable projects, Korridor B V49 and part of the Rhein-Main-Link project, with a total project value of more than EUR 3 billion, have been awarded to Sumitomo Electric, which will be anchor projects to pave the way for a climate neutral energy system in Germany.
SEI also announced in May the construction of a high-voltage submarine cable factory in the UK.
Sumitomo Electric Industries is the largest Japanese employer in the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, employing 75,000 people, largely due to its wire harness manufacturing for the automotive sector. It acquired the British company Lucas in 1990, Italian Cabind Automotive in 2001 and Volkswagen Bordnetze GmbH in 2006. Südkabel used to be part of ABB, and employs around 300 people. This new acquisition shows a diversification away from the automotive into the energy sector – a trend common across many Japanese companies with operations in the region – a similar much larger scale acquisition being Hitachi’s acquisition of ABB’s power grid business.
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