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技术支持:牛人在线发信人: xiaoxiaowu (hehe), 信区: Job_Post 标&&题: AkzoNobel 2015 Fast Track Management Program(FTMP) 发信站: 天地人大 (Wed Dec 17 11:09:50 2014), 站内 &&AkzoNobel 2015 Fast Track Management Program(FTMP) && &&Company Introduction AkzoNobel is a leading global paints and coatings company and a major producer of specialty chemicals. We supply industries and consumers worldwide with innovative products and are passionate about developing sustainable answers for our customers. Our portfolio includes well-known brands such as Dulux, Sikkens, International and Eka. Headquartered in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, we are consistently ranked as one of the leaders in the area of sustainability. With operations in more than 80 countries, our 50,000 people around the world are committed to delivering leading products and technologies to meet the growing demands of our fast-changing world. 阿克苏诺贝尔是全球领先的油漆和涂料企业,也是专业化学品的主要生产商。我们为全球工业与广大消费者供应创新产品,全力投入为客户打造各种可持续发展的解决方案。我们旗下品牌阵容鼎盛,拥有多乐士(Dulux)、新劲(Sikkens)、国际(International) 和依卡(Eka) 等著名品牌。阿克苏诺贝尔总部设在荷兰阿姆斯特丹,我们一贯在可持续发展领域保持领先。我们广布全球80多个国家的55,000名员工力争提供领先的产品和技术,满足快速变化的市场中不断增长的需求。 &&Program Introduction: Fast Track Management Program, a globally managed program for high-potentials focused on building leadership capability and providing breadth of experience over an intensive, two-year period.&&&&Pass our rigorous selection process, and you'll join a vibrant and diverse group of high-potential, ambitious early-career professionals all on an accelerated route to managerial positions. You'll have a steep learning curve and the chance to start building an impressive international network from the moment you join AkzoNobel.&&&&What do we offer? Key elements of FTMP: ?Three placements, including at least one that takes you abroad ?Challenging assignments with real responsibility across a variety of businesses, locations and functions (e.g., Marketing, Supply Chain, Finance) ?Comprehensive on-the-job training and support from a senior business mentor ?A dedicated class Training & Development curriculum, alongside fellow Fast Track Program peers. Ultimately, if you do well, you can expect to gain a managerial role early in your career with AkzoNobel.&&&&Who do we look for? The Fast Track Management Program is not for everyone – to be selected you need to be an outstanding achiever with senior leadership potential. You must be ready to take on challenging assignments around the globe, and keen to take full advantage of the training, development and mentoring opportunities that will help take your career to the next level. &&But if you’ve got what it takes – if you’re a talented professional with the ambition, drive and potential to take an accelerated route to the top – then you’re exactly the kind of person we want for the Fast Track Management Program. &&Essential requirements:&&?3–5 years’ work experience ?Master’s degree (Business, Engineering, MBA or similar degree preferred) ?Relevant extra-curricular activities ?Fluent in English (written and spoken) ?Geographically mobile and willing to travel and relocate ?Leadership skills, potential and ambition to fulfill senior business management positions in the future ?Excellent people and communication skills, sound business acumen, passion and drive ?High self-awareness and a desire to develop yourself and others ?International orientation and cultural awareness &&How do I apply? ?Step 1: Send us your online application and CV&&?Step 2: Complete our online aptitude tests&&?Step 3: Take a competency-based interview&&?Step 4: Attend a group assessment session at one of our global Assessment Centers&&&&The Recruitment cycle for the FTMP class of 2015 has now opened! More information, head to /careers/ftmp/apply/ -- &&※ 来源:·天地人大 http://www.tdrd.org·[FROM: 180.107.162.*] &&△△Ying•Jie•Sheng。com
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名企校园招聘阿克苏诺贝尔是全球领先的工业企业,总部设于荷兰阿姆斯特丹,核心业务包括装饰漆..
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3秒自动关闭窗口From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Akzo Nobel N.V., trading as AkzoNobel, is a
, active in the fields of decorative , performance
and specialty . Headquartered in Amsterdam, the company has activities in more than 80 countries, and employs approximately 47,000 people. Sales in 2014 were EUR 14.3 billion. Following the acquisition of , the company has restructured on 2 January 2008, and rebranded itself on 25 April of the same year.
Company headquarters in
AkzoNobel consists of 11 business units, with business responsibility and autonomy. For managerial purpose these cooperate in three groups, which are supported by one managerial board.
Currently, a seven member-strong Executive Committee (ExCo) was established, which is composed of two members of the Board of Management (BoM) and five leaders with functional expertise, allowing both the functions and the business areas to be represented at the highest levels in the company.
The ExCo includes Chairman and
Ton Büchner,
Ma?lys Castella, Marten Booisma (responsible for Human Resources), Sven Dumoulin (General Counsel), Werner Fuhrmann (responsible for Specialty Chemicals), Ruud Joosten (responsible for Decorative Paints) and Conrad Keijzer (responsible for Performance Coatings). The board holds office in . Prior to August 2007, the Executive Committee was headquartered in .
Due to high revenues from the sales of its pharmaceutical business, AkzoNobel was the world's most profitable company in 2008.
This part of the business is mostly geographically organized:
South East & Southern Asia (SESA)
UK and Ireland
South Europe and Africa
North and West Europe
Latin America
AkzoNobel markets their products under various brandnames such as , Bruguer, Tintas Coral, Hammerite, Herbol, Sico, Sikkens, , Interpon, Casco, Nordsj?, Sadolin, Cuprinol, Taubmans, Lesonal, Levis, , Flood, Flora, Vivexrom, Marshall, and Pinotex among others. These products were used on 's ,
Opera House in , the
and , the , , and
AkzoNobel is a leading coatings company whose key products include automotive coatings, specialized equipment for the car repair and transportation market and marine coatings. The coatings groups consist of the following business units:
Automotive & Aerospace Coatings (A&AC)
(including
The chemicals group now consists of four business units.
Functional Chemicals (FC)
Industrial Chemicals (IC), before 1 January 2009 known as Base Chemicals (BC)
Pulp and Performance Chemicals, under brand name Eka (PPC)
Surface Chemistry (SC)
The divestment of the former business unit of Chemicals Pakistan was completed in Q4 2012.
As chemicals producer, AkzoNobel is a world leading
specialist,
products, and other industrial chemicals. Ultimately, AkzoNobel products are found in everyday items such as paper, ice cream, bakery goods, cosmetics, plastics and glass. Each business unit has an annual turnover of approx EUR 1.000 – 1.900 million.
AkzoNobel has a long history of mergers and divestments. Parts of the current company can be traced back to 17th century companies. The milestone mergers and divestments are the formation of AKZO in 1969, the merger with Nobel Industries in 1994 forming Akzo Nobel, and the divestment of its pharmaceutical business and the merger with ICI in
resulting in current day AkzoNobel.
1887 Zwanenberg,
laboratory in
1923 , pharmaceuticals company founded by Saal van Zwanenberg in Oss
1838 Noury & Van der Lande, oils and
company in
1886 Kortman and Schulte, a chemicals and
factory was founded by Constant Kortman and Herman Schulte in
1947 merger of Zwanenberg and Organon to Zwanenberg–Organon, renamed in 1953 Koninklijke Zwanenburg Organon (KZO)
1965 take over of Kortman and Schulte and merger of Noury & Van der Lande with Koninklijke Zwanenburg Organon
1792 Sikkens Lakken, lacquers manufacturer founded by Wiert Willem Sikkens in , the Netherlands
1835 Ketjen,
producer founded by Gerhard Tileman Ketjen in
1918 Nederlandse Zoutindustrie (KNZ, NeZo),
producer in
1962 merger of Koninklijke Nederlandse Zoutindustrie and Ketjen to Koninklijke Zout Ketjen. Sikkens joints the merger
1967 merger Koninklijke Zout Ketjen and Koninklijke Zwanenberg Organon to Koninklijke Zout Organon (KZO)
producer in Oberbruch,
1911 Eerste Nederlandse Kunstzijdefabriek Arnhem,
(artificial silk) company founded by Jacques Coenraad Hartogs in . Later renamed Nederlandse Kunstzijdefabriek (Enka)
1928 De Internationale Spinpot Exploitatie Maatschappij (ISEM) manufacturer of
Enka's rayon spinning machines continually breakdown. Its director, Jacques Coenraad Hartogs, turns to Netherlands electrical pioneer and friend Rento Hofstede Crull for a solution. To manufacture the spinning pot, one of Hofstede Crull's companies, De Vijf and Jacques Coenraad Hartogs Nederlandse Kunstzijdefabriek form a joint venture: ISEM. The profit of this joint venture allowed the Nederlandse Kunstzijdefabriek to establish subsidiaries in the United States, the , for example, as a means of also circumventing trade protectionism.
1929 merger of Vereinigte Glanzstoff Fabriken with Nederlandse Kunstzijdefabriek, forming Algemene Kunstzijde Unie (AKU)
1938 integration of ISEM, after Hofstede Crull's death, with the AKU
1921 , US slaughtering industry starts
factory, in .
1949 Armour Industrial Chemical Co. opens world’s first commercial
plant in , USA.
1969 The AKU and the Koninklijke Zout Organon (KZO) merge, forming AKZO.
1970 acquires chemical activities of Amour and Co.
1985 acquires Levis Paints (Belgium)
1987 acquires
division of .
1992 divest
business to .
1993 forms the 50/50% joint venture Akcros Chemicals - together with "Harrisons Chemicals (UK) Ltd." (Harcros), a subsidiary of .
1994 merges with Nobel Industries, forming Akzo Nobel. The new Akzo Nobel has 20 business entities.
manufacturer is founded in Karlskoga.
1893 Bofors becomes a company majority owned by
1984 Bofors acquires KemaNobel.
From Stockholms Superfosfat Fabriks - Fosfatbolaget - KemaNord to KemaNobel
candles factory, founded by
(also the founder of the Swedish newspaper ) in
1871 Stockholms Superfosfat Fabrik,
factory is founded by Oscar F Carlson - with help from
- in G?ddviken,
outside Stockholm.
1931 Stockholms Superfosfat Fabriks ends its Swedish superphosphate production and a new
factory opens a year later in .
1941 begins Swedish production of
at a new plant in .
1944 begins making
and starts trial production of .
1945 opens a
plant at Stockvik.
1947 acquires Liljeholmens Stearinfabrik.
1964 Stockholms Superfosfat Fabriks becomes Fosfatbolaget.
1970 Liljeholmens Stearinfabriks candle production moves to .
1868 Barn?ngen Tekniska Fabrik AB,
factory at Bondegatan on
in Stockholm.
1874 KemaNord chemical company was founded by
in Stockholm.
factory, producing of
glue, founded by Lars Amundsen (son of brother to , the first person at the ) - with help from
1935 Casco forms subsidiary in Norway.
1946 forms subsidiary in Denmark.
1970 forms subsidiary in Finland, taken over by KemaNord
1970 KemaNord acquires Liljeholmens Stearinfabriks’ chemicals business, Barn?ngen Tekniska Fabrik and Casco.
Fosfatbolaget changes its name to KemaNord.
Liljeholmens Stearinfabriks’ chemicals businesst becomes a division within KemaNord, KemaNord Specialty Chemicals.
business is combined into one paper chemicals product group within KemaNord Specialty Chemicals.
1973 CascoGard, a product group within Casco, joins KemaNord Specialty Chemicals.
Cascogard develops into the production of agricultural chemicals such as ,
1863 Nitroglycerin, stearin candles factory is founded by Alfred Nobel in Stockholm.
1965 Nitroglycerin becomes Nitro Nobel.
1978 KemaNord acquires Swedish civil
chemical group Nitro Nobel and changes its name to KemaNobel.
The specialty chemicals division KemaNord Specialty Chemicals changes its name to KenoGard.
At that time KenoGard produces organic specialty chemicals for plant and wood protection, disinfection and hygiene, paper production, plastics production, oil production, road construction, fertilizer production and mineral purification.
1978 KemaNobel, Barn?ngen Tekniska Fabrik acquires Liljeholmens Stearinfabrik.
1979 Casco began cooperation with Norwegian adhesives and explosives group Dyno Industries regarding particleboard resin.
1981 acquires Swedish electronics group Pharos from .
1982 acquires Swedish paints group Nordsj? in .
1983 combines the food systems groups of KenoGard and Kema Nobel to form Probel.
Probel produces specialty chemicals and systems for agriculture, food and technical industries.
Probel is in turn divided into two areas, Kenogard, for plant and wood protection, and , for initiators, , anti-caking and ScanRoad.
1984 Casco formed subsidiary in Singapore, which later opens offices in Malaysia (1989), Thailand (1990), Indonesia (1991), the Philippines (1991), the People's Republic of China (1993), Hong Kong (1994), and Vietnam (1994).
1984 Bofors acquires KemaNobel.
Both Bofors and KemaNobel have historic ties to , the 19th century Swedish inventor whose invention of
gave a safe way to manage the detonation of .
1984 Bofors acquires the majority shareholding in KemaNobel
1985 Bofors integrates the entire KemaNobel group and changes its name to Nobel Industries.
Probel becomes Nobel Biotech within KemaNobel Specialty Chemicals.
KenoGard Specialty Chemicals became KeNobel.
1986 divests business civil explosives, Nitro Nobel.
1986 acquires Swedish paper and pulp group Eka AB, which becomes a business area, Eka Nobel.
As a result Eka becomes a major
producer and expanded its operations to North America.
1988 acquires Berol Kemi, Swedish surface chemistry group, from Procordia
and merges it with KeNobel to form a new business area, Berol Nobel.
1988 merge with the two Swedish holding companies Investment AB Asken and Investment AB D. Carnegie.
1990 Eka Nobel acquires Alby Klorat and Stora Kemi from Swedish forest group Stora Kopparberg, 's paper chemicals division, starts joint venture in India viz. Arjun Chemicals and makes heavy investments in new plants. Eka runs production in 14 countries around the world. Lignox, a patented,
bleaching process is introduced.
1991 Eka's j.v in India Arjun Chemicals started the production with fortified rosin soaps intended for the application paper industry.
1991 Eka Nobel's starts hydrogen peroxide production in Venezuela.
Casco Nobel
1987 acquires the majority shareholding in Sadolin & Holmblad, a Danish
and adhesives group, from ATP, Hafnia, , and the Foss and Sadolin families.
Together with Casco and Nordsjo forms the business area, Casco Nobel.
1988 Casco Nobel acquires Parteks adhesives and joint compound operations in Finland and Raison Tehtaats adhesives operations in Finland, and the adhesives company Arkol in Italy.
1989 acquires Swedish inks group G-man from Swedish forest group
and merges it with Sadolin Printing Inks to Casco Nobel Inks, later Akzo Nobel Inks.
1990 acquires Crown Berger, English paints group, which became part of Casco Nobel.
1991 Casco Nobel begins cooperation with Martinswerk GmbH regarding production of Lacquer additive Pergopak at Stockvik.
Other business areas
1990 Pharos acquires the American electronics group Spectra-Physics, and change name to Spectra-Physics.
1991 Nobel Industries and Sadolin & Holmblad sells
Kemisk Vaerk K?ge herbicides activities, KVK Agro Chemicals, to ,
the chemical-technical activities, KVK Chemical-Technical, to ,
the only Nordic producer of color and textile
Kemisk Vaerk K?ge of Denmark to
of USA, part of
1991 forms a 50/50% joint venture together with , named Swedish Ordnance, Bofors's electronics activities are gathered in NobelTech.
1992 sells Nobel Consumer Goods business area - mainly Barn?ngen Tekniska Fabrik, Liljeholms, Sterisol, and Vademecum - to the German group .
1992 sells its 50% shareholding in Swedish Ordnance to joint venture partner FFV's new owner .
1993 sells NobelTech to Celsius Industries and
1994 merges with AKZO, forming Akzo Nobel. Nobel Industries contributes to Akzo Nobel with the business areas
paints and adhesives (Casco Nobel),
bleaching and paper chemicals (Eka Nobel),
surface chemistry (Berol Nobel),
Nobelpharma (Nobel Biotech) and Spectra-Physics, becomes listed on Stockholm Stock-Exchange.
The new Akzo Nobel has 20 business entities.
1895 Elektrokemiska Aktiebolaget (abbreviated EKA), Swedish for
corporation, is founded by
(founder of the ), C. W. Collander, and Rudolf Liljeqvist (who becomes Managing Director) in , Sweden.
The first products are
1924 moves to , north of , Sweden.
1927 manufactures 3,000 tons of chemicals in Bohus, and starts production of .
1930 adds many new chemicals
1951 is acquired by the Swedish forest company, .
1956 starts production of .
1968 begins new hydrogen peroxide production, based on a Russian license.
1972 invest in a new
plant in Bohus, with employees totalling 460 employees, and begins with large investments in environmental protection.
1980 begins
production in Maastricht, the N which becomes Eka’s first plant outside Bohus.
1983 grows in paper chemicals, based on Compozil, and established a subsidiary in Finland.
acquires Eka.
1777 Holmblad & Co., Danish
company, founded by Swedish born Jacob Holmblad in .
1907 Sadolins Farver, paints company, founded by Gunnar Asgeir Sadolin in Copenhagen.
1909 Sadolins Farver enters the field of
- later named Sadolin Printing Inks.
1912 Sadolins Farver takes over Holmblad & Co.'s Eftf. and becomes Sadolin & Holmblad.
1914 Sadolin & Holmblad divide its operations into Sadolin Paints and Sadolin Printing Inks.
1933 founding a joint venture Polish-Danish Ink Factory in Poland, lost the shareholding in 1939.
1946 Sadolin & Holmblad founds Kemisk Vaerk K?ge, A/S.
Sadolin & Holmblad founds its first foreign subsidiary.
1946 Sadolin & Holmblad co-founds Kemo-Skandia, A/S.
1949 Sadolin & Holmblad makes a new structure: Danish Paint and Adhesives business, a Danish Printing Inks business as well as an Export business - besides the Kemo-Skandia and KVK chemicals businesses.
1955 Sadolin & Holmblad has subsidiaries in all Nordic countries.
1959 Sadolin & Holmblad divides into a Sadolins National Division and Sadolins International Division and creates Sadolins Research & Development Laboratories for the entire group.
1974 Sadolin & Holmblad makes a new divisional structure: Sadolin Paint Division Nordic, Sadolin Paint Division International, Sadolin Printing Ink Division and KVK Chemical Division.
1975 Sadolin & Holmblad makes Sadolin Adhesives Division after the merge with Lars Foss Kemi, A/S.
1977 Sadolin & Holmblad change the name of Sadolin Adhesives Division to Sadofoss Adhesives Division.
1978 Sadolin & Holmblad change the name of Sadolin Paint Division Nordic to Sadolin Paint Scandinavia Division, while Sadolin Paint Division International takes over the responsibility of Finland and the Soviet Union, leaving Sadolin Paint Division Scandinavia with market responsibility for Denmark, Norway and Sweden.
1978 Sadolin & Holmblad makes a joint management for Sadolin Printing Ink Division and Sadofoss Adhesives Division.
1987 Sadolin & Holmblad change its divisional structure to Division Sadolin Decorative Paints, Division Sadolin Industrial Coatings, Division Sadolin General Coatings, Division Sadolin Printing Inks, Division Sadofoss Adhesives, and Division KVK Chemicals.
1987 Nobel Industries acquires Danish paints group Sadolin & Holmblad, and Sadolin & Holmblad becomes a business group - with its own divisions - within Nobel Industries business area paints Casco Nobel, which until then consisted of the Swedish paints and adhesives group Casco Nobel AB (operating adhesives through AB Casco and paints through AB Nordsj?).
1988 sells the Scandinavian marine paints activities to the Norwegian paint group Jotun A/S.
dissolves Division Sadofoss Adhesives to Casco Nobel AB, the Swedish paints and adhesives group, within Nobel Industries' business area paints and adhesives Casco Nobel, which divides the activities between its Division Casco Nobel Building Adhesives and Division Casco Nobel Industrial Adhesives & Resins.
1989 sells the Scandinavian automotive (line and repair) paints activities to the American paint group PPG.
dissolves Division Sadolin Industrial Coatings and the management responsibility of industrial coatings activities are transferred to Division Casco Nobel Industrial Coatins under business area paints and adhesives Casco Nobel.
dissolves Division Sadolin Printing Inks and the management responsibility of printing inks activities are - together with Nobel Industries' newly acquired Swedish printing inks group, AB G-man, transferred to the newly created Division Casco Nobel Inks under business area paints and adhesives Casco Nobel.
dissolves Division KVK Chemicals and sells Kemisk Vaerk K?ge to its management group's newly founded holding company, KVK Holding A/S (whom in 1992 sells the group to the American group SunChemical, itself a subsidiary group of the Japanese group Dainippon Inks & Chemicals.
acquires the agrochemical activities and the chemical-technical (mainly Castrol Oil) activities of Kemisk Vaerk K?ge, where after the agrochemical activities are then sold to the German group Schering A/G and a newly founded company, KVK Agro A/S while the chemical-technical activities are sold the English group Burmah-Castrol Oil.
1990 dissolves Division Sadolin General Coatings and the management responsibility of general coatings activities - mainly non-European associated companies with own factories - are transferred to Division Casco Nobel Industrial Coatings within business area Casco Nobel.
left back in Sadolin & Holmblad is the management responsibility of Division Sadolin Decorative Paints - even though many of the subsidiaries and associated companies before Nobel Industries takeover is still owned by Sadolin & Holmblad.
1991 dissolves as Sadolin & Holmblad and becomes Nobel Industries A/S - a "sleeping" sub-holding company of its parent company Nobel Industries.
Sadolin Paints
1949 creates the subsidiary company Sadolin & Holmblad Norge A/S in , Norway.
1954 creates the subsidiary company Sadolin Oy/AB in , Finland, and the associated company DYO A.S. in , Turkey (opens a decorative coatings factory and marine coatings factories).
1958 creates the subsidiary company Sadolin France S.A. in , France, and the associated company Sadolin ve Yasarin A.S. in Izmir, Turkey (opens an industrial resins factory).
1959 creates the subsidiary company Sadolin Paints (E.A.) Ltd. in , Kenya.
1960 buys a majority shareholding in Farve- og Lakfabrikken Svend Overgaard, A/S in , Denmark.
1962 Sadolin Paints (E.A.) Ltd. opens a foreign branch in , Tanzania.
1962 creates the wholly owned subsidiary companies Sadolin Bilf?rg, A/B in Stockholm, Sweden.
1962 buys minority shareholdings in Merol GmbH. & K.G. in , West Germany, and Semco S.r.l. in , Italia.
1962 buys the activities of O.F. Asp Lak- & Fabrik, A/S in Copenhagen, Denmark, which is incorporated into Sadolin & Holmblad.
1962 converts the minority owned associated company Sadolin ve Yasarin A.S. to DYO ve Sadolin A.S. in Izmir, Turkey (opens an automotive refinishes factory, a metal and plast industrial coatings factory and a wood finishes factory).
1964 Sadolin Paints (E.A.) Ltd. opens a foreign branch in , Uganda.
1965 Tanzanian branch becomes a wholly owned subsidiary company, Sadolin Paints (Tanzania) Ltd. in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania.
1966 creates the majority owned subsidiary company Arrigoni-Sadolin S.p.A. in , Italia, while Semco S.r.l. is dissolved.
1967 creates the wholly owned subsidiary company Sadolin GmbH. in , West Germany, while Merol GmbH. & K.G. is dissolved.
1967 Ugandan branch becomes a wholly owned subsidiary company, Sadolin Paints (Uganda) Ltd. in Kampala, Uganda.
1968 creates the majority owned subsidiary company Sadolin Paints (Ethiopia) S.P. in Addis Abba, Ethiopia.
1968 creates the wholly owned subsidiary companies Sadolin (U.K.) Ltd. in , England (in 1981 moves to ); and Division Technique du B?timent Sadolin S.A.R.L. in Paris, which both are marketing companies.
1970 creates the associated company P.T. Danapaints Indonesia in , Indonesia.
1970 change Kemo-Skandia, A/S in Copenhagen, Denmark from a chemical factory to a paint marketing company - operating together with Farve- & Lakfabrikken Svend Overgaard A/S in Aalborg, Denmark.
1972 creates the associated company Sadolin Paints (Cyprus) Ltd. in , Cyprus.
1973 sells the entire wholly owned shareholding in Sadolin France S.A. in Paris, France, and the company continues with a licensing agreement (it is the first subsidiary to be divested).
1975 merges the subsidiary Kemo-Skandia, A/S in Copenhagen, Denmark, into the subsidiary Farve- og Lakfabrikken Svend Overgaard, A/S in Aalborg, Denmark.
1975 loses the entire majority shareholding in Sadolin Paints (Ethiopia) S.P. in Addis Abba, Ethiopia, which is nationalized (it is the first subsidiary to be nationalized).
1976 merges with the paint factory Danlac A/S in Copenhagen, Denmark, which is incorporated into Sadolin & Holmblad.
1976 creates the associated company Sadolin Paints (Oman) Ltd. in .
1977 buys a minority shareholding in Pars Sadolin Chemicals Ltd. in , Iran, which has own production.
1977 creates the marketing subsidiary company Sadolin Produkten B.V. in , the Netherlands - serving Benelux countries.
1978 creates the marketing subsidiary company Sadolin A/G in , Switzerland - serving Austria and Switzerland.
1980 sells the entire minority shareholding in Sadolin Paints (Oman) Ltd. in Muscat, Oman, and the company continues with a licensing agreement (it is the first associated to be divested).
1981 buys a minority shareholding in the associated company Chemcraft Sadolin Inc. in , Canada, which has own production.
1982 buys the activities of Mercandia Sie's Farve- & Lakfabrik, A/S in Copenhagen, Denmark, which is incorporated into Sadolin & Holmblad.
1982 sells the entire wholly owned shareholdings in the subsidiaries Sadolin Paints (Tanzania) Ltd. in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania, and Sadolin Paints (Uganda) Ltd. in Kampala, Uganda, and the companies continues with licensing agreements.
1983 creates the subsidiary companySadolin of America, Inc. in , North Carolina, USA, and this company creates at the same time a subsidiary company,Sadolin Technology, Inc. in , North Carolina, USA.
1984 Sadolin of America buys a majority shareholding in Paint Products Company, Inc., which becomes Sadolin Paint Products, Inc. in , North Carolina, US.
1984 sells the entire minority shareholding in Pars Sadolin Chemicals Ltd. in Tehran, Iran, and the company continues with a licensing agreement.
Sadolin Printing Inks
1946 creates the majority owned subsidiary company Sadolin F?rgfabrik, AB in Stockholm, Sweden.
1955 creates the majority owned subsidiary company Sadolin Painovarit Oy in Helsinki, Finland.
1960 creates the majority owned subsidiary company Sadolin Trykkfarvefabrikk A/S in Oslo, Norway.
1967 the associated company DYO ve Sadolin A.S. Izmir, Turkey (opens an ink factory).
1977 buys the activities of Corona Trykfarver in Copenhagen, Denmark, which is incorporated into Sadolin & Holmblad.
1986 creates the majority owned subsidiary company Sadolin Iberica S.A. in , Spain.
Sadofoss Adhesives
1945 Sadolin & Holmblad makes a consumer and industrial adhesives business.
1946 Sadolin & Holmblad gets the Danish 3M agency for adhesives products .
1960 sells consumer and industrial adhesives business and the Danish 3M agency to Lars Foss, who founds Lars Foss Kemi (the 3M agency is in 1963 sold to 3M).
1975 Sadolin & Holmblad merge with Lars Foss Kemi, A/S in , Denmark, (the merge also includes "Lars Foss Kemi A/S" in , Norway, "Lars Foss Kjemi AB" in , Sweden, and "Espe-Foss Oy/AB" in Helsinki, Finland).
1976 creates the minority owned company Sadofoss S.A. in , C?te d'Ivoire.
1977 Sadofoss A/S in Fredensborg, Denmark, "Sadofoss A/S" in Sandvika, Norway, "Sadofoss AB" in Helsingborg, Sweden, and "Sadofoss Oy/AB" in Helsinki, Finland, new names for the adhesives companies.
KVK Pigments and Chemicals
1934 founding the Danish color
company Kemisk Vaerk K?ge (also called Kemisk Vaerk Koege or Chemical Works Koege) and for short KVK.
1946 becomes a parent company, when Kemisk Vaerk K?ge is transferred to a new subsidiary company and becomes Kemisk Vaerk K?ge, A/S.
1946 Kemisk Vaerk K?ge, A/S diversify its business to also include textile pigments.
1947 Kemisk Vaerk K?ge, A/S diversify its business to also include agriculture chemicals (mainly herbicides).
1958 sells 50% of its shareholding in Kemisk Vaerk K?ge, A/S to the American pigment group Inmont.
1971 Sadolin & Holmblad buys back the 50% shareholding in Kemisk Vaerk K?ge, A/S from Inmont.
Kemo-Skandia
1948 co-founds a chemical factory in Copenhagen, Denmark, Kemo-Skandia, A/S.
1959 takes full control over Kemo-Skandia, A/S.
1970 transfer Kemo-Skandia, A/S to the paint business, where it becomes a paint factory.
1937 Swedish producer of coatings for fishing lines Berol is founded by fishing enthusiast Bernstr?m and his friend Olson, a chemist, to make coatings to reinforce cotton fishing lines in , and within a few years, Berol, whose name is derived from the first letters of the founders' last names, is established as a manufacturer of waterproofing agents for shoes, leather jackets and sheepskin.
1943 Berol, now with six employees, extended its product range to include products to protect food from being destroyed by wet conditions for the defense industry.
1945 Berol moves to , and begins producing non-ionic, surface active products for washing powder as well as adhesives and paint improvers.
(MoDo) buys Berol. MoDO, a Swedish forest products company, was preparing to produce
from its paper mill waste products in , .
1960 MoDo builds a petrochemical
plant in the ice-free, deep water port of Stenungsund, Sweden, in an agreement with Stockholms Superfosfat Fabriks and the U.S. oil company
(Esso). Over the course of the decade, MoDo buys more chemical companies, where of some of them gets integrated within Berol.
1971 MoDo consolidates its Swedish chemicals companies into a new company called MoDoKemi, headquartered in , the Berol name disappears as a registered company.
1973 Statsf?retag buys MoDoKemi. Statsf?retag, a Swedish state's private holding company, (later called Procordia), changes the name to Berol Kemi.
1974 Berol Kemi buys from MoDo the Swedish production units of
derivatives at , near .
1979 Berol Kemi made major investment made in modernizing and expanding cellulose derivatives plant in Domsj?.
1980 Berol Kemi participates in founding of Oleochemicals Sdn. Bhd. in Malaysia.
1988 Bofors acquires Berol Kemi.
1788 John Hall & Sons founded.
Smith & Walton is founded.
1818 Richard Hilton
1844 Potter & Co. (Charles Potter and Harold Potter) acquired xx from Richard Hilton
company Lincrusta is founded by Frederick Walton.
1887 The wallpaper company Anaglypta in
is founded by Thomas J Palmer and the Storey Bros.
1899 The Wallpaper Manufacturer’s Company (WPM) is founded.
1915 The Walpamur Company is created by as the paint company of The Wallpaper Manufacturer’s Company (WPM).
1915 The Walpamur Company acquires Kinder & Co.
1929 The Walpamur Company acquires Arthur Sanderson & Sons.
1931 Anaglypta and Lincrusta merged under the name of Relief Decorations, and at the same time became part of The Wallpaper Manufacturer’s Company (WPM).
1963 The Walpamur Company acquires Smith & Walton.
takes over The Wallpaper Manufacturers’ Company (WPM).
1965 Crown Decorative Products, a new division within The Wallpaper Manufacturers’ Company (WPM), exist of Polycell, Sanderson & Sons and Smith & Walton
1975 The Walpamur Company changes its name to Crown Decorative Products.
1980 Crown Decorative Products acquires Relief Decorations.
1986 Akzo Coatings acquires Permoglaze.
acquires The Wallpaper Manufacturers’ Company (WPM).
1760 Lewis Berger & Sons founded.
1840 Jenson & Nicholson founded.
Berger, Jenson & Nicholson is founded by the merger
1988 Williams Holdings from
acquires Berger, Jenson & Nicolson and merged with The Walpamur Company creating Crown Berger.
1989 Williams Holdings acquires Jacoa from Ward White (UK) and merged into Crown Berger.
1990 Nobel Industries acquires Crown Berger Ltd. from Williams Holdings, and is split into several businesses.
Crown Berger Decorative Paints becomes , an independent division for decorative coatings.
Crown Berger Industrial Coatings and RCL becomes part of Casco Nobel Industrial Coatings Division,
Crown Inks becomes part of Casco Nobel Inks Division.
Sadolin Nobel UK continues as part of Sadolin Nobel Decorative Paints Division.
1991 Nobel Industries acquires MacPherson Paints is acquired from
and becomes part of Crown Nobel Decorative Paints Division.
1995 Akzo Decorative Coatings of Akzo Coatings, Crown Nobel Decorative Paints Division of Crown Berger Ltd. and Sadolin Nobel UK Ltd. makes up the new Akzo Nobel Decorative Coatings Ltd.
2001 Crown Inks is sold, in line with Akzo Nobel's exit from the ink industry (now part of )
2001 Relief Decorations, wallpaper manufacturer with the brands Anaglypta and Lincrusta is sold to Imperial Home Décor.
2003 Imperial Home Décor is taken over by Crown Wilman Vymura Ltd.
1994 merger of AKZO and Nobel Industries, forming Akzo Nobel
divests fine and pharma chemicals business area Nobel Chemicals,
divests biotech business area Nobel Biotech
divests electronic business area Spectra-Physics.
1995 divests
resins business to .
1998 Akzo Nobel acquires , a chemical company with leading positions in industrial coatings and in .
EU forces sale of Aeronautical films and sealants businesses to allow completion.
November 1998 , Akzo Nobel divests Courtaulds industrial coatings
Industrial coatings produces plastic packaging, laminate, aluminium tubes, architectural coatings and in USA, packaging coatings, plastic tubes, performance film and aerospace coatings and sealants businesses.
September 1998 forms a new Fibres Group by mergering Akzo Nobel Fibres and Courtauld Fibres under the name
Courtaulds Fibres had just commercialized Tencel, a solvent spun cellulose made from wood, based on a process developed initially in Akzo NA.
January 1999 makes Acordis a stand-alone group within Akzo Nobel by dissolving the Fibres Group.
December 1999 divests Acordis to .
1999 acquires the ethical pharmaceutical business of Japan-based ,
acquires Italian pharmaceutical manufacturers
and acquires , the veterian pharmecutical group Hoechst Roussel Vet from
and divests its shareholding in Rovin Pharmaceuticals.
2007 Organon pharmaceutical business sold to
for EUR 11 billion.
1996 sells crop protection business to .
1998 acquires the remaining 50% of the joint venture Akcros Chemicals (PVC additives)
and acquires the amides business of South Korean chemical company ,
business to
and Arjun chemicals India, part of Eka Chemicals.
Arjun chemicals remains a licensee for paper
chemicals.
1999 Pulp & Paper Chemicals acquires Korean paper chemicals business,
Polymer Chemicals becomes worldwide distributor of the specialty additive products CIRS SpA,
AkzoNobel Chemicals starts joint venture with
of Taiwan on dicumyl peroxides (DCP) and
and divests its Dianol
2000 divests its stake in 's
business to .
2001 divests
optical monomers business to
and disinvests its 50% stake in Akzo-PQ Silica
business to joint-venture partner .
2002 divests printing inks business to the management and NeSBIC Buy Out Fund.
2004 divests Catalyst business to
2005 divests Ink & Adhesive Resins to .
2007 divests Akcros Chemicals to GIL Investments
and disinvests its 50% stake in Flexsys rubber chemicals to joint-venture partner .
1998 acquires 's decorative coatings business in Europe, Turkish paint company Marshall Boya
increases it shareholding from 5 % to 60 % in Tunesian paint company .
1999 acquires the majority shareholding in American decorative coatings company Coatings & Chemicals Corp. (CCC).
1999 establish joint venture with
of Japan on coil coatings,
finds a joint venture partner for Akzo Dexter Aerospace Finishes (AD Aerospace Finishes), for 40 %
2004 diverst Industrial Adhesives's two-component
adhesives to
divests Coatings Resins to .
2005 divests UV/EB Resins to .
2006 acquires the quoted Canadian decorative and industrial coatings company SICO Inc..
2007 acquires the Canadian industrial coatings company Chemcraft International, Inc (founded 1976),
which from 1981 to 1994 was known as Chemcraft Sadolin, Inc, owned 40 % by Sadolin & Holmblad.
1999 Akzo Nobel divests Akzo Nobel Information Services.
2007 Akzo Nobel delists its shares from the US stock market ().
Main article:
December 1926: Four major chemical companies in Great Britain merge to become Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI): , , , and the .
1927 ICI opens for business with 33,000 employees in five main product areas: alkali products, explosives, metals, general chemicals, and .
1928 establishes its Head Office at
1929 signs a deal with , establishing
for , the main ingredient in .
1933 "discovers" , which is later patented and sold as an insulating material.
1935 agrees to let
exclusively sell nitrogen in parts of Asia, Europe, and South and Central America, due to declining demand for fertilizer,
1948 ICI and
end cooperation on technical information, prices and markets, as result of a U.S.
1952 opens a huge chemical complex in , , England.
1965 begins an ambitious building plan in Britain, Germany, and the United States.
1972 Britain joins the Common Market, ICI focusing its attention on the United States.
1977 continues its American investment, with acquisitions that include a
plant in , .
becomes chief executive,
the company's focus changes from outdated products to drugs and specialty chemicals.
1986 focusses to paint and specialty products with the purchase of 's Chemical division and Glidden Paint.
1993 demerges its bioscience businesses, splitting into two the publicly listed companies: ICI and ,
Zeneca later merges into ,
1997 buys its biggest-ever acquisition from
four businesses: National Starch, , Uniqema, and
begins the divestment of its bulk
businesses.
1999 merging five ICI businesses, forms a health and personal care products company, .
1999 sells polyurethanes, the , the aromatics businesses and its share of the
supply at Wilton to
2007 sells Uniquema to
2008 Akzo Nobel acquires British Imperial Chemical Industries plc and rebrands the company to AkzoNobel.
sold in management buyout.
2009, Akzo Nobel divests Chemicals Pakistan to KP Chemical.
2010, AkzoNobel's rebrand was formally recognised when they appeared on the shortlist of the Transform Awards for rebranding and brand transformation.
June 2010, AkzoNobel divests National Starch business to .
December 2012, AkzoNobel agrees to sell its North American Architectural Coatings business to
Expancel is a unit within AkzoNobel. Expancel produces
under the tradename "Expancel Microspheres". Expancel has its head office in Sundsvall, Sweden. Production, R&D, sales and marketing is located in Sundsvall. Expancel has sales offices in Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Italy, US, Brazil, Thailand, Singapore and China. The number of employees is about 200.
EUR14,3 billion
EUR546 million
EUR14,59 billion
EUR724 million
EUR15,39 billion
EUR -2,169 billion
EUR15,70 billion
EUR541 million
EUR14,64 billion
EUR754 million
EUR13,03 billion
EUR285 million
EUR15,42 billion
EUR -1,08 billion
EUR10,22 billion
EUR410 million
EUR10,02 billion
EUR715 million
EUR13,00 billion
EUR961 million
EUR12,83 billion
EUR945 million
EUR13,05 billion
EUR602 million
EUR14,00 billion
EUR818 million
EUR14,11 billion
EUR671 million
industrial coating brand AkzoNobel
trade name
synthetic fiber
producer of Twaron, former company AkzoNobel
composite material patented by AkzoNobel
(PDF). AkzoNobel 2015.
, <, Retrieved on 4 March 2009.
, , English version
Jaap Tuik. Een bijzonder energiek ondernemer-Rento Wolter Hendrik Hofstede Crull (): pioneer van de elektriciteits voorziening in Nederland Zutphen, The Netherlands: Historischcentrumoverijssel & Walburg Pers, 2009. pp.: 137-138 ISBN 978.90.; also
Tyler, By Richard (). .
. Communicate magazine. January 2010.
Dawson, Brian (27 Jan 2012). . NYSE Magazine. Expancel microspheres from AkzoNobel can swell to as much as 60 times their original volume.
. Dutch Daily News. 6 Apr 2011. AkzoNobel is boosting capacity in Sweden for its Expancel expandable microspheres in order to meet growing global demand.
Gerlin, Helen (23 May 2001). . . Expancel vid Akzo Nobel byggs ut och moderniseras – ett projekt som syssels?tter ett flertal arbetare fr?n olika f?retag. (Expancel at Akzo Nobel is being expanded and modernized - a project that employs numerous workers from different companies.)
Scott, Alex. "Akzo Nobel adds capacity for Expancel spheres.(expandable polymer spheres, Sweden)(Brief Article)." Chemical Week. IHS Global, Inc. 2003. HighBeam Research. 2 Jun. 2012 &&. (subscription required)
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