

In 1996, CGE created Neuf Cegetel to take advantage of the 1998 deregulation of the French telecommunications market, accelerating the move into the media sector which would culminate in the 2000 demerger into Vivendi Universal and Vivendi Environnement ( Veolia). In 1983, CGE helped to found Canal+, the first pay-TV channel in France, and in the 1990s, they began expanding into telecommunications and mass media, especially after Jean-Marie Messier succeeded Guy Dejouany on 27 June 1996, acquiring companies such as the Babelsberg Studio. CGE then acquired the Compagnie Générale de Chauffe, and later the Montenay group, with these companies later becoming the Energy Services division of CGE, and later renamed " Dalkia" in 1998. It acquired the Compagnie Générale d'Entreprises Automobiles (CGEA), specialized in industrial vehicles, which was later divided into two branches: Connex (later Veolia Transport) in 1999 and Onyx Environnement (later Veolia Environmental Services) in 1989. Beginning in 1980, CGE began diversifying its operations from water into waste management, energy, transport services, and construction and property.
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For more than a century, Compagnie Générale des Eaux remained largely focused on the water sector.įollowing the appointment of Guy Dejouany as CEO in 1976, CGE extended its activities into other sectors with a series of takeovers. CGE also supplied water to Nantes, Venice (from 1880), Constantinople (from 1882) and Porto (from 1883). In 1861, it obtained a 50-year concession with the City of Paris.

In 1854, CGE obtained a concession in order to supply water to the public in Lyon, serving in that capacity for over a hundred years. On 14 December 1853, a water company named Compagnie Générale des Eaux ( CGE) was created by an imperial decree of Napoleon III.
