Latest news with #Kubu


Time of India
23-05-2025
- Automotive
- Time of India
Northvolt to wind down battery making in Sweden by the end of June
Swedish automotive battery maker Northvolt , which declared bankruptcy in March, plans to wind down its remaining battery cell production in the Nordic country by the end of June, its trustee said on Thursday. Northvolt filed for bankruptcy in Sweden on March 12, making it one of the country's largest corporate failures and effectively ending Europe's best hope of developing a rival to challenge China. While the search for a buyer of the Swedish battery cell making business continued, there was no realistic prospect for a purchaser to assume control in the near term, bankruptcy trustee Mikael Kubu said in a statement on Thursday. "A gradual wind-down of battery cell production in Northvolt Ett will be initiated, with the objective of ceasing production by 30 June," Kubu said, referring to the company's plant in the Swedish town of Skelleftea , its main business. At the same time, there are interested parties and potential buyers for various business operations within the Northvolt group, and negotiations are ongoing at varying stages of progress, the bankruptcy trustee added. Northvolt said at the time of the March filing that its plant in northern Sweden would continue to run in the short term. It later received financial guarantees from key stakeholders to maintain a scaled-down continuation of its operations. The EV battery maker initially sought US Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in November as its cash pile dwindled and it scrambled to secure funds, but it eventually failed to raise the cash needed.


Local Sweden
22-05-2025
- Automotive
- Local Sweden
Bankrupt Swedish battery maker Northvolt to end production in June
Swedish electric car battery maker Northvolt, which filed for bankruptcy in March, will stop production at its main factory in Sweden in June, the court-appointed bankruptcy trustee said on Thursday. Advertisement Founded in 2016, Northvolt had been seen as a cornerstone of European attempts to catch up with Asia and the United States in the production of battery cells, the crucial component of electric vehicles. Mikael Kubu, the trustee managing the bankruptcy process, said in March that he hoped that the ailing company could "maintain production" while they searched for a buyer. "The bankruptcy estate has been able to continue battery cell production with a limited number of employees, supported by the existing customer," Kubu said in a statement. However, Northvolt only had a single customer left, truck maker Scania. Advertisement "This arrangement is not sustainable in the long term for a single stakeholder, nor for the bankruptcy estate itself," he added. Kubu said that as a consequence "a gradual wind-down of battery cell production" would be initiated at the company's main factory Northvolt Ett in Skellefteå with the objective of ending production by June 30th. The trustee added that "efforts to identify a purchaser remain ongoing." Northvolt had struggled under a mountain of debt, slow demand and production delays, when it applied for bankruptcy in Sweden on March 12th. Later that month, Kubu announced that more than half of the company's 5,000 staff would be laid off, with around 1,700 kept on during the bankruptcy process. At the time, Kubu told news agency TT that continuing operations during the bankruptcy process was "likely crucial to be able to sell the business entirely or partially". The company had filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States in November to buy time to find new investors, but its efforts ultimately failed, leaving its 5,000 employees with an uncertain future.
Yahoo
25-03-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Zoo announces death of 13-year-old Sumatran tiger
A tiger who has been put down at a zoo due to an "untreatable spinal condition" has been described as "truly remarkable". Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens, in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, announced the death of Kubu, a 13-year-old Sumatran Tiger, on Monday. It said the animal had been under veterinary supervision for age-related mobility issues. However, it was later discovered he had a prolapsed disc and nerve root tumour. "Despite the dedicated efforts of our keepers and veterinary team to manage his care and ensure his comfort, the decision was made to let him pass peacefully and with dignity," the zoo said. The Norfolk attraction is home to a variety of animals and big cats including snow leopards, Amur leopards and clouded leopards. The tiger was born at The Big Cat Sanctuary in Ashford, Kent, before arriving at Thrigby in September 2013 when he was two years old. It said he brought a "striking presence and a calm, regal personality". "From the moment he joined our family, Kubu captured the hearts of everyone who met him. "His gentle yet commanding demeanour made him a favourite among visitors, while his keepers formed a special bond with him, caring for him with deep respect and admiration." Kubu was an "ambassador" for his species and was a "truly remarkable tiger," it added. In August 2023, the park announced the death of Sumatran tiger Dua who had resided there since 2005. The female tiger was 19 when she died and had been showing signs of a "geriatric cat". Kubu was the last remaining tiger and the attractions hopes to have a young male tiger join the gardens by the summer with a female joining later in the year. It said it had also worked to extend the tiger enclosure in order to provide more space and modernisation, and to promote successful breeding. "Though his powerful roars will no longer echo through the gardens, Kubu's memory will live on through the impact he made on our visitors and the commitment of Thrigby Hall to wildlife conservation," the zoo said. Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. Snow leopard Aurora 'finding her feet' at new zoo Deaths of two tigers mourned by zoos Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens


BBC News
25-03-2025
- Entertainment
- BBC News
Great Yarmouth zoo announces death of 13-year-old Sumatran tiger
A tiger who has been put down at a zoo due to an "untreatable spinal condition" has been described as "truly remarkable".Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens, in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, announced the death of Kubu, a 13-year-old Sumatran Tiger, on Monday. It said the animal had been under veterinary supervision for age-related mobility issues. However, it was later discovered he had a prolapsed disc and nerve root tumour. "Despite the dedicated efforts of our keepers and veterinary team to manage his care and ensure his comfort, the decision was made to let him pass peacefully and with dignity," the zoo said. The Norfolk attraction is home to a variety of animals and big cats including snow leopards, Amur leopards and clouded leopards. The tiger was born at The Big Cat Sanctuary in Ashford, Kent, before arriving at Thrigby in September 2013 when he was two years old. It said he brought a "striking presence and a calm, regal personality"."From the moment he joined our family, Kubu captured the hearts of everyone who met him. "His gentle yet commanding demeanour made him a favourite among visitors, while his keepers formed a special bond with him, caring for him with deep respect and admiration." Kubu was an "ambassador" for his species and was a "truly remarkable tiger," it added. In August 2023, the park announced the death of Sumatran tiger Dua who had resided there since 2005. The female tiger was 19 when she died and had been showing signs of a "geriatric cat". Kubu was the last remaining tiger and the attractions hopes to have a young male tiger join the gardens by the summer with a female joining later in the year. It said it had also worked to extend the tiger enclosure in order to provide more space and modernisation, and to promote successful breeding. "Though his powerful roars will no longer echo through the gardens, Kubu's memory will live on through the impact he made on our visitors and the commitment of Thrigby Hall to wildlife conservation," the zoo said. Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


Local Sweden
12-03-2025
- Business
- Local Sweden
KEY FACTS: What we know so far about the Northvolt bankruptcy
What has happened? Northvolt's board voted on Tuesday to file for bankruptcy in Sweden, with the company then on Wednesday filing bankrupcty applications to Swedish courts for five companies: Northvolt AB, Northvolt Ett AB, Northvolt Labs AB, Northvolt Revolt AB and Northvolt Systems AB. The immediate trigger was the deadline to pay 291 million kronor to the Swedish Tax Agency, but the bigger problem was the company's failure to secure a further round of financing or find a buyer for the ailing business. What happens now? The court today accepted Northvolt's application and appointed the company's nominee, Mikael Kubu, chief executive of the Swedish insolvency and reconstruction specialist Ackordscentralen, to act as trustee over the business. What will happen to people who are working at Northvolt? Tom Johnstone, the company's interim chairman, said at the press conference that there were close to 5,000 people still employed at Northvolt and that he was "hopeful that operations would continue to a certain degree". "Let's focus on working with the trustee to secure continued production, to secure jobs, we hope, for a number of people there," he said. If Kubu manages to find a buyer for one or more of the businesses, some of these may be able to stay working at the factory. "We are looking at what the conditions are like for maintaining production," Kubu said in an interview with TT on Wednesday. On paper, he said, all of the employees will lose their jobs even if the factory continues to operate as the business will need to be passed to a new owner. "The redundancies usually take a bit of time, but all staff are normally made redundant in a bankruptcy. The operation can of course live on, but then it will be as a new company," he said. If no buyer can be found or if Kubu decides that there needs to be a staff reduction to make one or more of the units viable, then workers will lose their employment. When companies go bankrupt in Sweden, employees are protected by a so-called 'wage guarantee', which determines how much of any unpaid salaries, holiday pay and notice pay you are entitled to receive from the bankrupt company. In 2025, the maximum wage guarantee is 235,200 kronor. The exact amount employees receive is decided by the bankruptcy trustee. How realistic is it that the factory can be rescued? Johnstone said at the press conference that the company had been making progress in overcoming its production problems, doubling cell output from serial production lines and improving its production yield by 50 percent since September. "We have had problems in the manufacturing. We've been very open with that," he said. "The trajectory is very good within the factory just now. It is moving absolutely in the right direction. It's not solved, but the trajectory is good just now." If this is true, a buyer, perhaps Chinese, perhaps European, may want to take over the factory. Some, however, question whether a remote location such as Skellefteå was ever the right place for such a plant. What does this mean for the founders or the company? Peter Carlsson, the former Tesla executive who co-founded the company in 2015, is in a relatively secure position, having sold a total of 198.1 million worth of his shares in the company between 2019 and 2021, according to research by Dagens Industri. When he was asked about this after the press conference on the bankruptcy, he became combative, denouncing the journalist for asking "an unbelievably stupid question". What does this bankruptcy mean for Swedish industry? This is being described in Swedish media as the "largest Swedish bankruptcy in modern times," with Swedish pension funds losing billions of kronor in savings as a result. The company's total debt is estimated to be around 60 billion kronor. Sweden's four AP funds, which manage Swedish pension savings, have invested 5.8 billion kronor in the company, or around 0.3 percent of the funds' total capital. That money was assumed to have been lost when the company went into reconstruction, and the new bankruptcy filing means it is gone for good. The company's owners stand to lose the most money, however, as they are estimated to have put around 90 billion kronor of capital into the company. The bankruptcy is also a heavy blow for Scania, the Swedish truck maker owned by Volkwagen, which had invested heavily in Northvolt and had hoped to rely on it as its sole supplier of batteries. As well as initially investing hundreds of millions of kronor in the company, Scania lent Northvolt 1.1 billion kronor last year as the troubled company battled to stay afloat. More importantly, the bankruptcy will raise questions over other projects in the so-called 'green transition', such as the green steel start-up Stegra, which, like Northvolt, had Vargas Holding as its intitial investor. What does the bankrupcty mean for Skellefteå? Lorents Burman, the mayor of Skellefteå, the city which had invested heavily in helping Northvolt get established, described the bankruptcy as "a nightmare" for the local municipality. The municipality has over the past ten years pushed for rapid development of new housing areas to house the expected Northvolt employees. Skellefteå Kraft, the power company owned by the municipality, has also invested some 100m kronor in readying the Northvolt site, and risks losing its most important new industrial customer.