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Chemical industry in Germany

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The chemical industry in Germany is one of the most well-established in the world, and a world leader; a quarter of the chemicals made in the EU, are made in Germany.

Currently the German industry, turning over 160 billion euros[1] is the European leader, and the third-biggest in the world. It is Germany's third-largest industry, after Germany's much-renowned automotive industry, and its mechanical engineering industry. The largest German chemical company is BASF, turning over 59 billion euros in 2020, with around 110,000 workers.

History

Before World War II, the German chemical industry was the European leader.

After World War II, the industry was not making any amount of organic chemicals, but by the mid-1950s, the West German industry was making around a third of the output of organic chemicals as the UK.

Exports

By 1960 West Germany was exporting 40% more chemicals than the UK, according to the British Productivity Council.[2]

Chemical works in Godorf, in North Rhine-Westphalia, in August 2017

Turnover by year

West Germany

  • 1956 £1,300m
  • 1957 £1,450m[3]

Energy consumption

The chemical industry consumes around 8% of Germany's energy, with 15% of Germany's natural gas, and 10% of Germany's electricity.

Workforce

There are 450,000 workers in the industry, with 400,000 workers for foreign subsidiaries of German chemical companies.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Chemical Industry". www.gtai.de.
  2. ^ Birmingham Mail Friday 22 February 1963, page 11
  3. ^ Belfast Telegraph Saturday 28 December 1957, page 1

External links

This page was last edited on 6 December 2023, at 12:19
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