Oji Paper Company

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Oji Paper Co., Ltd.
Type Public
Traded as TYO: 3861
Industry Pulp and Paper
Founded 1873
Headquarters Tokyo, Japan
Key people Kazuhisa Shinoda(President & CEO)
Shoichiro Suzuki (Chairman)
Revenue increase 1,318.4 billion JPY (FY 2007)
Net income increase 11.8 billion JPY (FY 2007)
Employees 20,056 (2008)
Website www.ojipaper.co.jp
Oji Paper headquarters in Tokyo, Japan

Oji Paper Company, Ltd. (王子製紙株式会社 Ōji Seishi Kabushiki-kaisha?) is a Japanese manufacturer of paper products. It is the 6th-largest paper manufacturing company in the world in terms of revenue.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] Operations

Oji Paper produces paper for printing, writing, and packaging. It also manufactures containers made from paper products, chemicals used in the production of paper and paper packaging equipment.[1]

The company has 86 production sites throughout Japan, and forestry operations in Australia, Canada, China, Germany, Brazil and other countries worldwide.

[edit] History

Oji Paper Company was founded February 12, 1873 by industrialist Shibusawa Eiichi as Shoshi Kaisha (抄紙会社?). Mills were established in 1875 in the village of Ōji, at the time a suburb of Tokyo, and in 1889 in Shizuoka. In 1893 Shibusawa renamed the company Oji Paper after the location of its first mill.[1] William Anderson[disambiguation needed ] went to Japan to oversee the erection of the paper mill in 1871.

In 1933, Oji Paper merged with Fuji Paper and Karafuto Industries, developing into an oligopolistic corporation that produced 80 percent of Japan's Western-style paper.

Following World War II, in order to prevent anti-competitive activities caused by overconcentration, the Excess Economic Powers Decentralization Act was implemented, breaking up the company into three components: Tomakomai Paper, Jujo Paper, and Honshu Paper.

Chitose Dam plant intake facility

Tomakomai Paper began as a one-plant operation, but upon its expansion into Kasugai, Aichi in 1952, the company was renamed Oji Paper Industries, and in 1960, it was renamed Oji Paper again. Oji Paper expanded its business through acquiring competitors including Kita Nippon Paper, Nippon Pulp Industries, and Toyo Pulp.

In 1993, Oji Paper merged with Kanzaki Paper to become New Oji Paper, and furthermore, in 1996, New Oji Paper and Honshu Paper merged again to become Oji Paper.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b "Corporate Data". Official Website. Oji Paper Co., Ltd.. 2005. http://www.ojipaper.co.jp/english/group/corporate/index.html. Retrieved 2008-12-04. 

[edit] External links

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