Troubled theme park operator Euro Disney fell deeper into the red last year as its operating costs soared and royalty payments for using the Mickey Mouse characters resumed.
The group, which in September unveiled a life-saving restructuring of its huge debt, also blamed a lacklustre tourism and leisure market for contributing to its growing losses.
However, Euro Disney chairman Andre Lacroix insisted: "The companys annual results reflect stable visitor numbers and turnover in another difficult year for the European travel and tourism industry.
"To that is added an increase in costs essentially linked to the re-establishment of licensing fees and payments to the owner, as well as to additional charges linked to the restructuring."
Euro Disney, which operates as the European outpost of the Disney empire, including running
Disneyland Paris, said its net loss for the year to September 30 was £101 million, more than double the £39m loss seen in the previous year.
"Its catastrophic," said one analyst. "I had expected a loss of about £70m, but £101m is a little bit too much."
Euro Disney said it paid £8.76m in fees linked to its financial restructuring, and £6.4m for scrapping its "Visionarium" attraction that will be replaced by another visitor facility in 2006. Mr Lacroix said the overall loss had been impacted by the resumption of royalty payments to 39 per cent shareholder Walt Disney Co for the use of the Mickey Mouse characters.
The payments, for which Euro Disney had obtained a waiver due to its financial difficulties, resumed in the last three quarters of 2003, costing it £40m.
At the operating level, Mr Lacroix said that Euro Disney, Europes biggest theme park operator, had swung to a £16.6m loss from a profit of £92.1m in the previous year.
However, Mr Lacroix said the company had generated revenue and attendance growth in the important fourth quarter.
Overall turnover was largely unchanged at £729m. Visitor numbers were flat at 12.4m, despite the company spending an extra £5.1m on marketing. But spending per visitor rose five per cent to £29.7m.
According to analysts, Euro Disney faces the challenge of increasing visitor numbers to amortise a rise in operating costs linked to its opening of a second park, the Walt Disney Studios, beside the Magic Kingdom east of Paris. Those operating costs rose to £745m from £636m a year ago.
The company ended a year of cliffhanger negotiations in September with news that it had won an agreement with creditors over restructuring its debt, hauling it back from the verge of bankruptcy.
Mr Lacroix said Euro Disneys current debt stood at £1.43 billion. As part of the debt restructuring, Euro Disney needs to carry out a £175m capital increase by March 2005.