Jump to content

Azomureș

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Azomureș
Company typePrivate
Industryfertilizers
Founded1962
HeadquartersTârgu Mureș, Romania
Key people
Zacharias Joshua (CEO)
RevenueIncrease $420 million USD[1]
Number of employees
1,090 (2024)
WebsiteOfficial website

Azomureș is the largest Romanian fertilizer producer. It is based in Târgu Mureș. The company was bought in 2002 by the largest fertilizer producer in Turkey, Transworld Fertilizers.[2] In 2011, Azomureș was acquired by Swiss company Ameropa.

In 1981,[3] the department of photosensitive materials within the Târgu-Mureș Nitrogenous Fertilizer Plant was put into operation, having Konishiroku[4] Japanese license.[5]

Ethnic hiring controversies

[edit]

Since its establishment, the ratio of Romanian workers to Hungarian workers in the plant has been significantly higher, estimated at 90% or even higher, if in addition to skilled workers are added technical and administrative staff.[6] This phenomenon is explained by the fact that the authorities that followed a national-communist political line, in the context of industrialization, undertook the action of unifying the structure of the population on the territory of the country.[7] Thus, Hungarian workers were not allowed to settle and work in Hungarian cities, and Romanians were brought in their place, especially from outside the Carpathian Mountains. At the Azomureș plant, at the time of opening, an entire class that graduated from a technical school in the Oltenia region was received, but when the leadership requested two chemists in 1968 and two Hungarians were assigned, they were rejected because of their ethnicity.[6]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Azomures a facut profit de 14 mil. euro in 2008, dupa o pierdere de 38 mil. euro in T4". Ziarul Financiar (in Romanian). 2009-02-16. Retrieved 2009-09-07.
  2. ^ "Presentation". azomures.com. Retrieved 2009-09-07.
  3. ^ Ing. Vasile Călinescu, Revista Tehnium, anul XII, nr. 122, 1/1981, p. 10
  4. ^ "Prezentare". Azomureș. Archived from the original on March 26, 2003. Retrieved November 23, 2021.
  5. ^ Török Gáspár; A marosváráshelyi fotográfia-fotóművészet múltja és jelene, Pannon tükör, 6/2007, p. 18
  6. ^ a b Translations on Eastern Europe political, sociological, and military affairs, No, 1404-A, U.S. Joint Publications Research Service, National Technical Information Service Department of Commerce, Springfield, Virginia, 22 June 1977, p. 37
  7. ^ Translations on Eastern Europe political, sociological, and military affairs, No, 1404-A, U.S. Joint Publications Research Service, National Technical Information Service Department of Commerce, Springfield, Virginia, 22 June 1977, p. 36