BERLIN (AP) – Germany’s Viessmann Group is selling its business with heat pumps, viewed as a key technology in making heating more climate-friendly, to Florida-based Carrier Global Corp as part of a EUR12 billion (USD13.2 billion) deal.
The sale of Viessmann’s “climate solutions” business, which includes heat pumps and which both companies announced late on Tuesday, comes as Germany is putting into place plans to phase out gas and oil heating systems as a way to curb global warming.
Heat pumps are seen as important to weaning Germans off those systems.
German Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck, who is leading those plans, said the Viessmann deal showed that the market for heat pumps “is so attractive that it is drawing investment”. He said in a statement that the government would examine the deal.
“It is important that the advantages of our energy policy and profits that are made with it continue to benefit Germany as a location,” he said. “We will pay attention to this.”
Senior opposition lawmaker Jens Spahn, in comments to the RND newspaper group, accused the government of piling pressure on manufacturers to step up their production fast or risk losing market share to Asian competitors.
“Apparently foreign investors are needed for that,” he said, arguing that the government’s policies were leading to “a sell-off of the German heat pump”.
The deal entails Carrier paying 80 per cent in cash and 20 per cent in Carrier shares to Viessmann. It will see family-owned Viessmann become one of the biggest shareholders in Carrier, of Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.
Carrier, whose business activities include refrigeration, said the Viessmann climate solutions division will provide it with “an iconic, premium brand in the highest growth segment of the global heat pump and energy transition markets”.