Orbia

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Orbia Advance Corporation, S.A.B. de C.V.
TypeSociedad Anónima Bursátil de Capital Variable
BMVORBIA
IndustryUtilities
Founded1953; 68 years ago (1953)
HeadquartersAv.Paseo de la Reforma,Col. Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City, Mexico
Key people
Juan Pablo del Valle Perochena (chairman)
Sameer Bharadwaj (CEO)
ProductsUtilities
BrandsNetafim, Wavin, Koura, Dura-Line, Vestolit, Alphagary, Amanco, PAVCO, Plastigama, Klea, Zephex
RevenueIncrease US$ 6.4 billion (2020)
Increase US$ EBITDA 1.7 billion (2020)
Number of employees
22,000(2019)
Websitewww.orbia.com

Orbia (previously Mexichem) is a global provider of specialty products and innovative methodologies with headquarters in Mexico City, Boston, Amsterdam and Tel Aviv.

Consisting of five commercial brands, Orbia operates in the precision agriculture, building and infrastructure, fluorinated solutions, polymer solutions and data communications sectors. Orbia has commercial activities in more than 110 countries, operations in over 60 countries and employs more than 22,000 people.

History[]

In 1953 – Cables Mexicanos S.A. founded by a group of Mexican and American investors, to satisfy a growing Mexican market for high-carbon steel wire ropes. In the 60s Cables Mexicanos S.A. changed its name to Aceros Camesa. In 1978 – A control company was created "Grupo Industrial Camesa". Becomes a publicly-held company, listed on Mexican Stock Exchange. 1997 – Grupo Empresarial Privado Mexicano (GEPM), a company held by the del Valle Family, acquires Grupo Industrial Camesa.[1]

Globalization, 2006–2013[]

  • 2011 – Mexichem acquires Alphagary Group, a leading producer of PVC, TPE and TPO compounds in the United States and the United Kingdom.[2]
  • 2012 – Mexichem acquires Wavin, Europe's leader in plastic pipe systems, expanding Mexichem's water management portfolio with acquired operations in 22 European countries.[3]

Recent history, 2014–2018[]

  • 2014 – Mexichem acquires Vestolit, the sixth-largest producer of PVC resins in Europe, the only European producer of HIS-PVC (high-impact modified polyvinyl chloride copolymer) and the second-largest European producer of PVC paste. Mexichem acquires Dura-Line, a global leader in HDPE conduit, duct and pressure pipe products for the telecom and data communications, energy and infrastructure industries.[4]
  • 2017 – Mexichem acquires 80% stake in Netafim, a world-leading precision irrigation approaches provider. This expands the company's reach into the Middle East, Africa and Asia to drive food security.[5]
  • 2018 – Mexichem acquires Sylvin Technologies, a Denver-based niche PVC compounds manufacturer, to expand into custom formulations as part of the Polymer Solutions group.[6]

Becoming Orbia[]

Orbia ImpactMark

In 2018, The Mexichem board of directors appointed Daniel Martínez-Valle as CEO.[7] Mexichem was rebranded in 2019 as Orbia.[8] Orbia is composed of , the Latin word for a sphere , and Bia, an ancient Greek personification of the concept of "force." The combination of these two roots expresses Orbia's ambitions as a "force for the world" and upholds the company's common purpose: To Advance Life Around the World.[9] In 2019, Orbia opened a new corporate office in the Torre Reforma building in Mexico City. The company launched Orbia corporate venture capital (CVC) fund, its first investment was into SeeTree, a Tel Aviv-based startup that provides tree health insights.[10] On 19 January 2021, Orbia announced Sameer Bharadwaj as the new CEO.[11]

[]

Orbia's logo – also known as an "ImpactMark" – resembles three intersecting elliptical rings. Instead of a static logomark, Orbia's is meant to indicate a dynamic representation of its performance. Each imperfect ring represents a year in time, showing Orbia's previous three years of performance across key categories (the outer ring marking the most recent year).[12]

References[]

  1. ^ JUDE WEBBER (2 March 2020). "Pivot by Mexico's Orbia reveals ESG dilemma". financial times.
  2. ^ Carlos Manuel Rodriguez (17 December 2010). "Mexichem Agrees to Purchase AlphaGary for $300 Million". bloomberg.
  3. ^ "Mexico's Mexichem buys PVC pipe producer Wavin for €531m". icis. 2 August 2012.
  4. ^ "Dura-Line to be Acquired by Mexichem". businesswire. 18 August 2014.
  5. ^ "Mexichem acquires 80% of Israeli irrigation giant Netafim Ltd. for US$ 1.9 billion". mexico-now. 15 August 2017.
  6. ^ "Dura-Mexichem Announces the Acquisition of Sylvin Technologies Inc". businesswire. 22 January 2018.
  7. ^ "Mexichem to Appoint Daniel Martínez-Valle Chief Executive Officer". businesswire. 31 January 2018.
  8. ^ "Mexichem renamed Orbia". Chemical Week. 16 September 2019.
  9. ^ Emily Chasan (5 September 2019). "PVC Pipe Giant Mexichem Changes Name Amid Plastics Backlash". bloomberg.
  10. ^ Lauren Manning (25 November 2020). "Orbia launches $130m venture fund, injects $3m into plant health startup SeeTree". agfundernews.
  11. ^ "CEO Daniel Martínez-Valle steps down / Sameer Bharadwaj announced successor". plasteurope. 26 January 2021.
  12. ^ Jude Webber (3 November 2019). "Daniel Martínez-Valle: refocusing an industrial group to 'do good". financial times.

External links[]

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