EnBW
Public | |
Traded as | FWB: EBK |
Industry | Electric utilities |
Founded | 1997 |
Headquarters | Karlsruhe, Germany |
Products | Electric power |
Revenue | €19.24 billion (2012) [1] |
Website |
www |
EnBW Energie Baden-Württemberg AG, or simply EnBW, is a publicly traded electric utilities company headquartered in Karlsruhe, Germany.
History
On 1 January 1997, EnBW was formed from the merger of two utilities companies from Baden-Württemberg, Badenwerk AG and Energieversorgung Schwaben AG (EVS). On 16 July 1999 two subsidiaries of the former EVS decided to retroactively merge into EnBW Ostwuerttemberg DonauRies AG (ODR). On 1 October 2003 the merger of EnBW with Neckarwerke Stuttgart AG took place.
EnBW was the main sponsor of football-clubs VfB Stuttgart (2005–2010) and Karlsruher SC. Currently it is sponsor of both clubs on a lower level. EnBW is also name- and main sponsor of Volleyball-Bundesliga-club EnBW TV Rottenburg and Beko Basketball-Bundesliga-club EnBW Ludwigsburg and main sponsor of Toyota Handball Bundesliga-club Frisch Auf Göppingen.
Recent News
In January 2015, EnBW sold a stake in its Baltic 2 offshore wind park to the Australian investment group Macquarie Group for a fee totalling €720 million, due for completion in summer 2016 and subject to antitrust approval.[2]
Structure
Shareholders
The two principal shareholders of EnBW are NECKARPRI-Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH, with a 46.55% share and Oberschwäbischen Elektrizitätswerke (OEW), with a 46.55% share. The two shareholders agreed to keep the share ratios as they are and to vote in mutual agreement on important decisions.[3]
Figures
About 5.4 million customers make EnBW the third-largest utilities company in Germany. With just under 24,600 employees an annual turnover of approximately 10.6 billion euro was generated in 2003. After the first mid-year 2004 19,500 coworkers remained generating a turnover of approximately €5.8 billion.
Carbon intensity
year | Production (TWh) | Emission (Gt CO2) | kg CO2/MWh |
---|---|---|---|
2002 | 65 | 16.8 | 488 |
2003 | 75 | 20.9 | 277 |
2004 | 73 | 19.2 | 263 |
2005 | 74 | 17.8 | 242 |
2006 | 75 | 18.1 | 241 |
2007 | 74 | 17.7 | 241 |
2008 | 67 | 17.0 | 254 |
2009 | 66 | 15.9 | 241 |
Facilities
Power plants
- Fossile Altbach Power Station
- Steam power plant Heilbronn Power Station
- Steam power plant Marbach am Neckar
- Turbine power plant Walheim
- Steam power plant Stuttgart-Gaisburg
- Steam power plant Stuttgart-Münster
- Coal and gas turbine plant Rheinhafen-Dampfkraftwerk Karlsruhe
- Neckarwestheim Nuclear Power Plant
- Obrigheim Nuclear Power Plant
- Philippsburg Nuclear Power Plant
- Pumped-storage plant Glems (Metzingen)
- Pumped storage plant Schluchsee
- Hydroelectric power plant Rheinfelden
- Baltic 1 Offshore Wind Farm
Power lines
- Eyachtal Span: overhead line crossing the Eyachtal (facility 615) (high voltage transmission line with largest span in Germany)
- facility 0704 (disconnected 110kV-three phase AC powerline near Gomaringen)
- facility 9461 (disconnected 110kV-three phase AC powerline near Göppingen)
A further special feature is, that on many powerlines of EnBW, which were built by former EVS before 1985 the aerial cable for telecommunication is installed like a garland on the ground conductor or an auxiliary rope.
See also
References
- ↑ "Financial Report 2012" (PDF). EnBW. p. 3.
- ↑ EnBW sells offshore windpark stake to Macquarie for 720 million euros. Reuters, 8 January 2015
- ↑ "Shareholder Structure: who owns EnBW". EnBW. Retrieved 11.06.12. Check date values in:
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