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Transdev

Société anonyme
Industry Public transport
Founded 3 March 2011
Headquarters 36-38, avenue Kléber
Paris
, France
Key people
Jean-Marc Janaillac (Chairman and CEO)
Products bus, tram, metro
Owner Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations (60%)
Veolia Environnement (40%)
Number of employees
83,000 (2016)
Website www.transdev.com/en


Transdev, formerly Veolia Transdev, is a French-based international private public transport operator with operations in 19 countries.

The group was formed by the merger of Veolia Transport and Transdev on 3 April 2011.Veolia Environnement and Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations (CDC) had 50% shareholdings. It was initially planned for the company to be sold by an initial public offering, potentially accompanied by a rebranding, within 12 months of the merger.

On 6 December 2011 Veolia Environment, seeking to reduce debt and focus on its core businesses of water, waste and energy, announced a €5bn divestment program over 2012/13 that would include a sale of its share in Veolia Transdev within two years. At the time of the announcement, Veolia Transdev declared its intention to concentrate on four main markets (France, the Netherlands, Germany, United States), to develop UK, Asia and Australia and to divest from other countries and other activities amounting to about 9-10% of global revenue in 2012/13.

After this announcement, the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations, for its part, officially reiterated its commitment to Veolia Transdev and its continued support as a shareholder to the group's development.

In early 2012 it was reported that Cube Infrastructure, a fund controlled by the French bank Natixis (Groupe BPCE), was likely to acquire about half of Veolia's stake in Transdev. The Caisse des Dépôts would take over the other half. This was not implemented, but instead, Caisse des Dépôts acquired 10% of the shares from Veolia in October 2012. Following the sale of Transdev subsidiary SNCM in late 2015, CDC and Veolia continued talks about selling Veolia's stake in the joint venture.

In 2013 CEO Jérôme Gallot confirmed Veolia Transdev would consolidate its operations down to 17 countries. Veolia Transdev has since been renamed to simply Transdev, but it is important to note that this is a different entity to the Transdev that Veolia Transport merged with in 2011, due to the partial ownership by Veolia Environnement and increased number of subsidiary operating companies as a result of that merger.


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