Borealis

For other uses, see Borealis (disambiguation).
Borealis AG
Public Limited
Industry Petrochemicals
Founded 1994
Headquarters Vienna, Austria
Key people
Mark Garrett, CEO; Mark Tonkens, CFO[1]
Products polyolefins, hydrocarbons, base chemicals, fertilizers
Revenue 8 billion (2013)
Number of employees
6,400 approx. (2014)
Website www.borealisgroup.com

Borealis AG is Europe's second and world`s eighth largest producer of polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) and is headquartered in Vienna, Austria.

Overview

Borealis AG is an international company in producing polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) products for the infrastructure, automotive and packaging market sectors. Its plastics are converted by customers into products such as food packaging, medical devices, diapers, energy and communication cables, water and sanitation distribution pipes and automotive parts.

With EUR 507 million net profit in 2011 and 5,300 employees, Borealis is headquartered in Vienna and operates primarily in Europe, with manufacturing operations in Belgium, Central Europe (Austria and Germany), Finland and Sweden. It also operates compounding units in Brazil, Italy and the USA, two innovation centres, European Innovation Headquarters as well as customer service centres in several countries.

The company is co-owned between the International Petroleum Investment Company of Abu Dhabi (64%) and OMV Aktiengesellschaft (36%).[2]

Though Borealis’ core products are polyolefins, the collective name for PE and PP, it also produces hydrocarbons, namely ethylene, propylene and phenol. With the acquisition of Agrolinz Melamine International (AMI), the company is expanding its product portfolio to include melamine and fertilizer.

History

Borealis was founded in 1994 by the merging of Neste and Statoil. In 1998 the petro chemistry sector of OMV was included; OMV and IPIC took over the 50% business share of Neste. In 2005 Statoil gave up its share of Borealis and one year later, in June 2006, the headquarters was relocated from Copenhagen to Vienna.

Products

Infrastructure

Pipe systems

Together with its joint venture Borouge, Borealis supplies polyolefin plastics products for the pipe industry. Applications cover water and gas distribution, waste and sewage disposal, chemical and industrial projects, in-house plumbing and heating as well as oil & gas exploration and transport.

Energy and communication cables

The company supplies polyolefin compounds for the wire and cable industry, which are used in low, medium, high and extra-high voltage energy transmission and distribution cables, in data and communication cables and in building and automotive wires.

Automotive

Borealis provides plastics products to the automotive industry for use in dashboards, door side claddings, front ends, air vent systems, bumpers under the bonnet and under-body shieldings. These products are used in areas such as zero gap applications for bumpers, off-line painted body panels and scratch resistant materials for car interiors and exteriors.

Packaging

Borealis polyolefins are used for applications such as healthcare, heavy duty shipment sacks, food packaging, flexible and rigid transport packaging, bottles, crates, boxes, trays and pallets.

Base chemicals

Phenol and acetone

Phenol and acetone are produced at Borealis' facility in Finland and are sold mainly to the adhesive, fibre, epoxy resin and polycarbonate industries in northern Europe. Phenol is used in adhesives, construction materials, carpets, CDs, DVDs, mobile phones and household appliances. Acetone is commonly used in solvents for paints, acrylics, fibres and pharmaceuticals.

Melamine and fertilizer

Agrolinz Melamine International (AMI) was consolidated into Borealis in 2007 and renamed Borealis Agrolinz Melamine GmbH. Agrolinz provides melamine (used to treat flooring and furniture for resistance to wear and tear) and fertilizer. With its daughter company Linzer Agro Trade, Borealis operates its own wholesaling business in the Danube region where Borealis provides fertilizer. In January 2012, Borealis acquired the French fertilizer producer PEC-Rhin.

Borstar proprietary technology

The company uses Borstar PE and PP technology to design molecular structured materials.

Joint ventures

Borouge

Borouge is Borealis’ joint venture with the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC). Its facility in Ruwais, Abu Dhabi (UAE) and consist of 3 facilities:

Borouge 1 was founded in 2001 and has and ethane-based cracker for production of 600.000 tonnes ethylene per year and two PE lines with a combined capacity of 580.000 tonnes/year and utilises Borealis' Borstar PE technology.

Borouge 2 was a major expansion project complete in 2010 which tripled the annual capacity of polyolefin capacity in Ruwais to 2 million tonnes/year.

Borouge 3 is an expension project which includes a new ethane cracker with new Borstar polypropelene and polyethylene units and also a LDPE and Butene unit that brings the total yearly capacity to 4,5 million tonnes - resulting Ruwais becoming the largest olefins/polyolefins site in the world.[2]

SPA

Speciality Polymers Antwerp is a joint venture of Borealis (33%) and DuPont (67%) and based in Zwijndrecht, Belgium. SPA produces polyethylene and has a yearly capacity of 125.000 tonnes[2]

Borealis Brasil

Borealis Brasil S.A. is a joint-venture between Borealis (80%) and the Brazilian Braskem(20%). Located in Itatiba and Triunfo in Brasil and formed in 1999. It server the automotive industry in South-America.[2]

External links

Resources

  1. Borealis website: management team, visited 28 February, 2015
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Borealis group website Owners and Structure, visited: 28 February, 2015