翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Potapovka culture
・ Potapy Emelianov
・ Potarch
・ Potarje
・ Potarje, Montenegro
・ Potarje, Tržič
・ Potaro River
・ Potaro-Siparuni
・ Potarophytum
・ Potarzyca, Gostyń County
・ Potarzyca, Jarocin County
・ Potash
・ Potash (disambiguation)
・ Potash and Perlmutter
・ Potash City
Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan
・ Potash pit
・ Potash works
・ Potashes (gang)
・ Potasie
・ Potasimto
・ Potassa, Gavorrano
・ Potassium
・ Potassium 2-ethylhexanoate
・ Potassium acetate
・ Potassium adipate
・ Potassium alum
・ Potassium aluminate
・ Potassium aluminium borate
・ Potassium aluminium fluoride


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan : ウィキペディア英語版
Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan

The Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan Inc., also referred to as PotashCorp, is a Canadian corporation based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The company is the world's largest potash producer and the third largest producers of nitrogen and phosphate, three primary crop nutrients used to produce fertilizer. At the end of 2011, the company controlled twenty percent of the world's potash production capacity, two percent of nitrogen production capacity and five percent of phosphate supply.〔( Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan 2010 Annual Report, "Company Overview", p. 5 )〕 The company is part-owner of Canpotex, which manages all potash exporting from Saskatchewan. It also has a joint-venture with Sinochem named Sinofert. In late 2013, it was 60%-owned by institutional shareholders.〔("POT: Ownership summary" nasdaq.com )〕 In 2007, the CEO, William Doyle was by far the highest earning CEO in Canada, earning over $320 million.
== History ==

The company was created by the government of Saskatchewan in 1975. In 1989 it became a publicly traded company as the government of Saskatchewan sold off some of its shares, selling the remaining shares in 1990.〔( Crown Investments Corporation of Saskatchewan - Saskatchewan Public Enterprise History ) 〕
The Saskatchewan potash industry began in the 1950s and 1960s. The government saw it as a promising new field and granted large subsidies to the new projects, mainly by American companies. However, this led to overproduction and when a global potash glut began in the late 1960s the industry almost collapsed. The Liberal government of the province introduced an emergency plan setting up quotas and a price floor in 1969. This plan was popular among the companies, which could now charge monopoly prices. The NDP government that was elected in 1971 in Saskatchewan was dissatisfied with this plan as the huge profits went to the companies rather than the government, and it wasn't sustainable in the long term. In 1974 the government passed a new potash regulation scheme, that included a reserve tax. This plan was resisted by the potash producers, and its constitutionality was challenged. Thus in 1975 the provincial government established the Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan as a government crown corporation.
In November 1975 the province announced its intention to take part of the potash industry into public ownership. The government offered to negotiate with the producers, and many of them agreed to sell to the government. Over the next several years PCS bought mines around Saskatchewan, and eventually came to control 40% of domestic production. Public ownership drew the ire of the United States government, which criticised the provincial government for buying Americans' assets and creating a monopoly. In the 1980s the Commerce Department accused the corporation of dumping and imposed massive duties on all potash imports to the United States.
In the early 1980s the company struggled and lost money for several years accumulating an $800 million debt. In 1989 the Conservative government decided to privatize it by selling the company to private investors. During the 1990s PotashCorp expanded by buying up a number of American potash companies including Potash Company of America, Florida Favorite Fertilizer, Texasgulf, and Arcadian Corporation. Today it owns assets across Canada, the United States, and also in Brazil and the Middle East. By March 2008, due to rising potash prices it had become one of the most valuable companies in Canada by market capitalization, valued at almost C$63 billion.
In August 2010, PotashCorp became the subject of a hostile takeover bid by Anglo-Australian mining giant BHP Billiton. On November 3, 2010, The Government of Canada announced that it was blocking the BHP bid as it did not feel the purchase would yield a "net benefit" for Canada; BHP withdrew its bid soon thereafter.
On April 6, 2014, the PotashCorp Board of Directors (announced ) the selection of Jochen Tilk as the new President and CEO effective July 1, 2014. He succeeds Bill Doyle who has been President and CEO since 1999.
In October 2013 Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. said the price of its potash slumped 28 percent after the company’s largest rival, Uralkali, announced plans to raise output.〔(Bloomberg, Potash Corp. Posts 28% Price Drop as Uralkali Ups Output, 24 October 2013 )〕
In December 2013, Potash Corp. announced its plans to lay off more than 1,000 employees 20 days prior to Christmas. The Premier of Saskatchewan, Brad Wall, wrote CEO Bill Doyle asking him to consider cutting the dividend on the stock. The dividend, in Doyle's reply, was sacrosanct.〔("PotashCorp owners should share the pain of cuts, Wall says" 5 Dec 2013 )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.