Delta rescues Mocoffee: 3 million euros to save Azambuja capsule factory
The Nabeiro group injects 3 million euros into Mocoffee, becomes sole shareholder and pays creditors 6 million. The plan writes off 64% of 23.4 million in debt.
Delta is taking over Mocoffee — and with it a factory in Azambuja capable of turning out 350 million coffee capsules a year. The recovery plan for the manufacturer, which reached 2026 on the edge of insolvency with 23.4 million euros in debt, rests on a 3-million-euro injection from the Nabeiro group, which becomes sole shareholder.
How much do Mocoffee’s creditors get back?
About 36% of what they are owed: the plan negotiated under Portugal’s special revitalisation process (PER) writes off 64.4% of the debt, with the Campo Maior group committing to pay common creditors six million euros in a single instalment. The banks take the biggest haircut — BCP and Caixa Geral de Depósitos top the list with 2.7 million each — and the State is in the queue too, between the tax authority and social security.
What happens to the factory’s workers?
The least bitter part of the deal: the plan foresees no layoffs, no reduced hours, no suspended contracts. For Azambuja’s industrial zone, keeping a plant with that installed capacity running is the difference between bad news and a scare with a decent ending — in a year when, curiously, construction keeps booming while company creation falls.
For Delta, the maths is simple: for 3 million plus the 6 paid to creditors, Portugal’s coffee giant locks in its own capsule production capacity in a market that keeps growing. Corporate details are on the official Delta Cafés site. In coffee, as in business, you only see the grounds when you reach the bottom of the cup.
By Beatriz Mota
Image: Delta Cafés/Grupo Nabeiro / Wikimedia Commons (public domain)