[3] T Plus incorporates assets from the territorial generating companies TGC-5, TGC-6, TGC-7, and TGC-9.
[3] It is the largest private heating and electricity generation company in the country,[4] controlling 7% of the power generation and 10% of the heating market.
[5] The director of T Plus was accused of paying over $14 million in bribes to regional officials in the Komi Republic between 2007 and 2014 in exchange for fixing tariffs for heating and electricity.
[6] The company's shares were delisted from the Moscow Exchange in September 2016.
[7] In 2022, the company's revenue amounted to 267 billion rubles.