This week, the company was filed for bankruptcy at Stockholm District Court and it is now increasingly clear that the subcontractors in Viksjö will be without money.

The company's CEO, Göran Solig, confirms for SVT Västernorrland that there is probably no money to pay out.

- No, that's right.

There is a great risk that no one gets paid, he tells SVT.

Unimaginable amounts

These are unimaginable amounts.

Last summer, the company reported liabilities of at least SEK 142 million to 189 companies.

Several of them are smaller construction companies that had machines and personnel for the wind power construction in Viksjö.

They will now be without compensation.

That it will be so now loads Active Works media and the negative attention the company attracted in Viksjö.

SVT Västernorrland has, among other things, told about connections between Active Works and Hells Angels and that there has been a threatening attitude on the construction site.

This spring, SVT's Assignment review also reported on the wind power complex in Viksjö and on all small entrepreneurs who have been in crisis since the money from Active Works ran out.

Was thrown out

Active Works has claimed that their payments ceased as a result of not being paid sufficiently by the German main contractor Nordex, while Nordex in turn claimed that they paid under the contract.

It will now be a bankruptcy trustee who is given the task of sorting out the tangle and probably many question marks remain to be straightened out.

Active Works has, among other things, demanded SEK 239 million from Nordex after it was thrown out of construction last winter.

What happens to that dispute remains to be seen, but Active Works hopes to come to an end regardless of the bankruptcy.

This is what CFO Tomas Ahlsén tells SVT.

Sollefteå company in the loop

It also remains to be seen what happens to the Sollefteå company NL Construction, which was close to Active Works and played an important role in Viksjö.

The Sollefteå company, which is also bankrupt, acted as an intermediary in Viksjö and brought in subcontractors to the project on behalf of Active Works.

At the time of the most recent report, the company had accumulated SEK 270 million in debt.

Also in that case, many small business owners with connections to Viksjöbygget have found themselves in a quandary.

During the spring and summer, both Active Works and NL Construction have been undergoing corporate restructuring.

In both cases, the reconstruction attempts have been considered hopeless and interrupted, which has now resulted in bankruptcy for Active Works.