Headlines

Roy the Boy's betting guide to Monaco
Hamilton holds out hope
Alonso tired of tyre moaners
Monaco GP: Wednesday Press Conference
FIA refuses return to 2012 spec rubber
Words with Whitmarsh
How the times can change
Ecclestone ready to buy New Jersey race promoter to get race off the ground
Lowe joins Mercedes next month
Teamwear finally in stock

Related links

Date Title
31/07 F1 exposure worth £137m a year to Melbourne
30/07 Valencia seeking to negotiate fee
30/07 In case you missed it... Hungary GP weekend
30/07 Hungary GP in Words, Stats and Pictures
28/07 F1 boosts its revenues but counts the cost of HD
22/07 German GP: Fastest Race Laps
22/07 German GP: Driver Tyre Strategies
22/07 Vettel's race ruined by post race penalty
22/07 German GP: Post Race press conference
22/07 German GP: Race notes - Pirelli

State bailout for Nurburgring

03/08/2012

The state legislature budget committee of Rhineland-Palatinate is to guarantee a loan for the Nurburgring circuit which recently filed for insolvency.

As the F1 circus arrived at Hockenheim for the recent German Grand Prix - the circuit shares the event with the Nurburgring on a rotating basis - Kurt Beck, the state governor for the Rhineland-Palatinate region in which the Nurburgring is located, admitted that the company behind it, Nurburgring GmbH, owes the Rhineland-Palatinate bank almost £235m for redevelopment work carried out in 2009.

Nurburgring GmbH had applied to the European Union's Executive Commission for an emergency loan of £10m to cover interest repayments, however this was not granted.

Now, the state of Rhineland-Palatinate has released "is releasing €254M (£192m) to guarantee a loan for the circuit, the budget committee having approved the deal on Wednesday.

This way, the Nurburgring "can service" a €330M (£259m) loan and "stay afloat", according to AP.

Meanwhile, Speigel Online reports that the state legislature "has to hurry up in activating its reserves, if it wants to keep interest fees as low as possible."

It is understood that, according to the government's finance department "every day, on which the state cannot pay off the credit, has a price tag" of €47,000 (£37,000).

Search

Search the PITPASS news
 
 

Widgets

Printer friendly page
Send to a friend
Discuss on the forum
Post to Facebook
Post to Twitter
RSS Feed
     

  Copyright © Pitpass 2002 - 2013. All rights reserved.

About | Advertise | Contact  | Copyright | Privacy & Security | RSS