Kværner
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Kværner ASA | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Founded | 1853 |
Headquarters | Oslo, Norway |
Industry | Heavy industry |
Website | http://www.kvaerner.com |
Kværner was a Norway-based engineering and construction services company in existence between 1853 and 2005 when it was merged with Aker ASA. The Kværner name still is used in the subsidiary Aker Kværner.
[edit] History
Kværner was founded in Oslo in 1853 and listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange in 1967. By the 1990s, Kværner assembled a collection of engineering and industrial businesses, including shipbuilding, construction of offshore oil and gas platforms, production of pulp and paper manufacturing equipment and operation of shipping fleet.
In 1992 Kværner acquired the Swedish company Gotaverken.
In 1996, Kværner acquired the UK conglomerate Trafalgar House and moved its international headquarters from Oslo to London. It added further acquisitions, financed predominantly by debt, until the economic slowdown in 2001 and a series of management missteps brought the company to the brink of bankruptcy.
In November 2000, Kværner sold its Construction Division to the Swedish company Skanska
In November 2001, Kværner was forced to merge with its rival Aker ASA, a Norwegian oil services group controlled by Kjell Inge Røkke. Røkke scuppered the solution preferred by Kværner's management, a rescue by Russia's oil giant Yukos. Kværner's international headquarters returned to Oslo and Kværner was restructured to become a holding company, with operating activities concentrated in Aker Kværner and Aker Yards. As of 2005 Kværner ASA was merged with Aker Martitime Finance AS, a wholly owned company of Aker ASA and the Kværner corportation ceased to exist.
[edit] External link
Companies: Aker ASA • Aker American Shipping • Aker Capital • Aker Drilling • Aker Floating Production • Aker Kværner • Aker Material Handling • Aker Seafoods • Aker Yards
Yards: Aker Aukra • Aker Brattvaag • Aker Brevik • Aker Finnyards • Aker Kværner Egersund • Aker Kværner Stord • Aker Kværner Verdal • Aker Langsten • Aker Ostsee • Aker Philadelphia Shipyard • Aker Promar • Aker Søviknes • Aker Tulcea • Chantiers de l'Atlantique
Defunct companies: Aker Maritime • Kværner • Resource Group International
People: Kjell Inge Røkke
See also: Category:Aker Group