Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Chemicals |
Founded | 1917 |
Headquarters | Seadrift, Texas, U.S.[1] |
Key people | Richard Wells (CEO & president) |
Products |
|
Revenue | US$4.377 billion (2019)[2] |
US$691 million (2019)[2] | |
US$523 million (2019)[2] | |
Total assets | US$5.278 billion (2019)[2] |
Total equity | US$0.925 billion (2019)[2] |
Parent | Dow Chemical Company |
Website | www |
Union Carbide Corporation (UCC) is an American chemical company. UCC is a wholly owned subsidiary (since February 6, 2001) of Dow Chemical Company. Union Carbide produces chemicals and polymers that undergo one or more further conversions by customers before reaching consumers. Some are high-volume commodities and others are specialty products meeting the needs of smaller markets. Markets served include paints and coatings, packaging, wire and cable, household products, personal care, pharmaceuticals, automotive, textiles, agriculture, and oil and gas. The company is a former component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.[4]
Founded in 1917 as the Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation, from a merger with National Carbon Company, the company's researchers developed an economical way to make ethylene from natural gas liquids, such as ethane and propane, giving birth to the modern petrochemical industry. The company divested consumer products businesses Eveready and Energizer batteries, Glad bags and wraps, Simoniz car wax and Prestone antifreeze. The company divested other businesses before being acquired by Dow including electronic chemicals, polyurethane intermediates, industrial gases (Linde) and carbon products.[5]
Of the more than 6.3 million farms in the country in January 1925, only 204,780, or 3.2 percent, were receiving central-station electrical service.