Business News
In Business News: road haulage is the "riskiest" sector due to increased competition after EU accession; the Delvita supermarket chain is bought out by German company; two Czech firms launch legal music downloads; a Brno company wins a large contract in Iraq; sugar beet growers plan to stage protests over closures; and tourism accounts for over 3 percent of Czech GDP.
Road transport 'riskiest business' since EU accession
The increased competition that has accompanied European Union accession has hit Czech road hauliers hard. According to a survey by Coface Czech, theirs is the riskiest sector in the Czech economy, with 55 delivery companies collapsing in the first nine months of this year. A representative of the Czech transport services group Cesmad told Hospodarske noviny that 60 percent of firms in the sector were making a loss in 2005, and this year things are even worse.German firm buys Delvita chain
The Delvita supermarket chain has been bought by the Germany company Rewe, owner of two other chains on the Czech market, Billa and Penny Market. Rewe will now operate 170 supermarkets in the Czech Republic. This follows the sale of the country's Carrefour shops to Tesco last year.Two firms launch first legal downloads in Czech Republic
Two Czech companies have begun offering legal music downloads. I-legalne.cz and AllMusic.cz this week became the first to make songs available legally over the internet in the Czech Republic. Meanwhile, a spokesperson for the Czech branch of Apple told Lidove noviny that the company had no plans to launch its popular i-Tunes service in this country, saying the service was not available in far more lucrative markets such as South East Asia.
Brno firm wins big contract in Iraq
The Brno-based firm Prokop Engineering has won a 40-million-dollar contract to supply technology for an oil refinery in Iraq. It isn't the only Czech company exporting to the war-torn state: exports in the first nine months of this year already exceed the total for 2005 by over 50 percent.