Thyssenkrupp Acquires MV Werften's Wismar Shipyard

June 10, 2022

Thyssenkrupp's defense division hopes to start building for the German navy from 2024 at a shipyard in Wismar, northern Germany, once owned by insolvent MV Werften, its head said on Friday after it bought the site.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz, in a policy shift after decades of attrition of Germany's armed forces, pledged in February after Russia invaded Ukraine to sharply increase defence spending, including an initial 100 billion euro ($106 billion) fund.

(File photo courtesy MV Werften)
(File photo courtesy MV Werften)

Thyssenkrupp Chief Executive Martina Merz said last month that decision was "beneficial" to its marine services division (TKMS), which said on Friday it expected news of the government fund to generate orders for both surface ships and submarines.

TKMS said that if production ramped up at Wismar in 2024, it could hire around 800 staff there and, with further orders in the surface vessel sector, that number could increase to more than 1,500.

MV Werften, which filed for insolvency in January, had a payroll of around 2,000, including about 1,100 workers at Wismar.

Neither company disclosed financial details of the transaction.


($1 = 0.9440 euros)

(Reuters - Reporting by Jan Schwartz; Additional reporting by Christoph Steitz; Writing by Miranda Murray; Editing by Maria Sheahan and John Stonestreet)

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