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Sociedad Química y Minera

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Sociedad Química y Minera de Chile S.A
Company typeSociedad Anónima
BCS: SQM-A, SQM-B
NYSESQM
IndustryChemicals & Mining
FoundedJune 11th, 1968
HeadquartersSantiago, Chile
Key people
Julio Ponce, (Chairman)
Patricio de Solminihac, (CEO)
ProductsIndustrial chemical
Iodine
Lithium
Specialty Plant Nutrition
RevenueIncrease US$ 2.4 billion (2012)
Increase US$ 649.2 million (2012)
Number of employees
4,902
Websitewww.sqm.com

Sociedad Química y Minera de Chile (SQM) is a Chilean chemical company and a supplier of plant nutrients, Iodine, Lithium and industrial chemicals.

SQM's natural resources and its main production facilities are located in the Atacama Desert between Chile's I and II regions.

History

SQM was founded in 1968 to reorganize the Chilean nitrate industry. In the course of the first phase the ownership was shared between the Chilean State and the Compañía Nitratera Anglo Lautaro S.A. During the second phase the industry was nationalised and was thus fully owned by the Chilean State. Finally in 1983 the process of privatisation started and was successfully completed in 1988.

Maria Elena – Tocopilla railway

Barriles station
GE 289A "Boxcab" engines built in the 1920s, some of the world's oldest locomotives still in commercial use
GE U20C arriving at Barriles

To transport nitrates from its mines to the port, SQM operates a 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) gauge railway from María Elena to Tocopilla. The railway consists of two sections; a diesel line to Barriles (parts of which were once electrified), and an electrified line down to Tocopilla, which is very steep at around 4%, and includes a switchback (locomotives are run around the train). All trains change locomotives at Barriles. Per year, the railway transports 1.1 million tons of finished product to the port of Tocopilla and 12 million tons of caliche ore from various mining sites to the Pedro de Valdivia plant.[1]

In August 2015 unprecedented flash flooding caused numerous washouts on the electric portion of the railroad, most notably the area around the switchback on the escarpment leading down to the port at Tocopilla. As a result of this, along with the closure of the Pedro Valdivia mine/plant, the railroad ceased all operations, both electric and diesel in late November 2015. All railroad staff were terminated and all railroad equipment is stored at Tocopilla and Maria Elena awaiting possible sale or ultimately scrapping. The end of a historic railway. Trucks are now hauling product from Maria Elena/Coya Sur plants to the port.

References