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Milan Vesely & Rudolf Knapp in 2001. |

Milan Vesely in 2002. |

Rudolf Knapp in 2003. |
Every day is an opportunity for improvement at the Slovak aluminium producer Slovalco
Milan Vesely and Rudolf Knapp, Slovalco industry managers, speak with EBRD
press officer Axel Reiserer in Ziar nad Hronom.
When Czechoslovakia split up in 1993, the new Slovak Republic faced an uphill
battle to convince the world of the wisdom of the divorce. It was not
immediately obvious how the 5 million Slovaks might benefit from a separation
from the 10 million Czechs, when Slovakia was the much poorer, less developed
and much less promising part of the once common state. That the split was
strongly driven by a populist and nationalist government in Bratislava
generated serious concerns in Europe, which did not help Slovakia’s image
either.
Eleven years on, the Slovak Republic is bustling ahead with audacious reforms
and is today earning praise for being a frontrunner of transition. Nowadays
the country aims to become the biggest automobile manufacturer in the world in
per-capita terms. Volkswagen is already producing cars, and new Peugeot and
Hyundai plants will become operational in a few years – at which point the
Slovak Republic will be producing 1 million cars a year.
If one company can serve as a showcase for the country’s successful
transformation, it is the aluminium producer Slovalco in Ziar nad Hronom. The
company is an offspring of the giant ZSNP factory, still situated next to
Slovalco and employing 600 people today, and created by government decree in
1951. The choice of location was highly influenced by political considerations
during the Cold War.
Using bauxite, the first tonne of aluminium was produced in 1953 and in the
ensuing years ZSNP expanded rapidly. No attention was paid to potential
environmental effects. As the chimneys kept belching out smoke, the pile of
toxic waste grew and grew.
Life expectancy declined, animals died, and eventually a whole village had to
be evacuated. When aluminium production from bauxite finally stopped, an
enormous area of 40 hectares with a perimeter of 11 kilometres was covered
with toxic waste. The treatment of this ecological scar remains a major
concern and financial burden to this day.
After the “Velvet Revolution” that ended communist rule in Czechoslovakia in
1989, it quickly became clear that ZSNP could not continue to exist in its
previous form. Negotiations with Norway’s Hydro Aluminium and the EBRD
eventually led to the establishment of Slovalco in 1993. A first $40 million
loan provided a state-of-the-art aluminium smelter in 1994, allowing polluting
and inefficient production to cease. In 2001 the EBRD and Citibank arranged a
$75 million syndicated loan for expansion of the company.
At the end of 1989, Milan Vesely and Rudolf Knapp, today General Director and
Chief Financial Officer of Slovalco, respectively, were doing their military
service. “The only scary moment I remember is when we were handed live
ammunition, to protect the airfield where I served from attacks by
protesters,” Knapp says.
In recent years Slovalco, supported by high demand and high prices for its
products, has done extremely well. Last year the company reported a profit of
$11 million. With annual production of 160,000 tonnes of liquid metal,
production is approaching maximum capacity. Ninety per cent of the exports are
shipped to the EU. But nothing would be more out of place at Slovalco than
complacency: “We still have to improve a lot,” Vesely says.
The EBRD has helped. “The Bank has brought a transfer of management culture,”
Vesely says. “We grew up in a command economy, where everything was top-down.
Now we are a team, we have discussions, we communicate. People are happier to
work in this environment.” Being a well-paying employer makes Slovalco
additionally attractive in a region with 20 per cent unemployment.
The company had to reduce its workforce in recent years, to 630, but it was
largely done by retirements and not replacing vacancies. A strong sense of
social responsibility is obvious. It is striking how neat and clean the whole
production area is. “We do believe that people work better in a clean
environment,” says Rudolf Knapp.
This is only one facet of the broader picture. But it illustrates the
understanding that things have had to change dramatically since 1989, and that
it hasn’t always been easy. Rudolf Knapp says: “We all lived in small houses
and had small cars. Today 90 per cent still live in the same houses, which are
now quite old, while 10 per cent have big new houses and drive huge Western
cars.”
There is no quick fix. “We have to be patient”, says Milan Vesely. Despite
recent progress, complete transition remains a long-term goal for a small
country with limited resources such as the Slovak Republic. But adds Vesely:
“If there is one useful thing we learned under communism, when everything was
scarce, it is how to make the best out of limited resources.”
4 November 2004
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