AMAG Austria Metall AG

Last updated
AMAG Austria Metall AG
Type metal manufacturer
PredecessorBerndorfer Metallwarenfabrik  OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
Founded1938
HeadquartersLamprechtshausener Straße 61, 5282 Braunau-Ranshofen, Austria
Productsmetal, aluminum
Number of employees
1,991 (2020)
Website www.amag.at

AMAG (Austria Metall AG) is the biggest company in the Austrian Aluminium industry sector. It is situated in the village of Ranshofen, which is in Braunau am Inn (Upper Austria).

Contents

Company history

Foundation and nationalization

After the annexation, an aluminum smelter known as Mattigwerk (named after the river Mattig) was built in 1939 by Vereinigte Aluminiumwerke AG, Berlin in Ranshofen near Braunau am Inn. After the Second World War, US troops occupied the plant and handed it over to the re-established Republic of Austria in 1946.

Aluminiumwerke Ranshofen GmbH, which was founded by the Republic of Austria in 1946, had effectively taken over the assets of Vereinigte Aluminiumwerke AG, Berlin, which had until then been publicly administered and located in Austria, as a Auffanggesellschaft in 1957. These operations, the aluminum smelter in Ranshofen and the bauxite mine in Unterlaussa, were nationalized in 1946.

Österreichische Metallwerke Aktiengesellschaft was founded by the Republic of Austria in 1948 and set up pressing and rolling mill facilities in Ranshofen for the production of semi-finished aluminum products.

United Metalworks Ranshofen-Berndorf (VMW)

1957 saw the merger of Aluminiumwerke Ranshofen GesmbH and Österreichische Metallwerke AG with Berndorfer Metallwarenfabrik Arthur Krupp AG, Berndorf, also nationalized in 1946, as the absorbing company, whose name was changed to Vereinigte Metallwerke Ranshofen-Berndorf AG in connection with this merger. In 1958 the registered office was transferred from Berndorf to Braunau. As a result of a further merger, Leichtmetall-GesmbH, Vienna-Berndorf, was incorporated into Vereinigte Metallwerke Ranshofen-Berndorf AG in 1958.

The company had plants in Ranshofen, Berndorf, Amstetten, Unterlaussa and Esslingen am Neckar as well as a forestry estate in Halltal near Mariazell. It produced primary aluminum and aluminum alloys in ingots, semi-finished products made of aluminum and aluminum alloys, semi-finished products made of non-ferrous metals, metal goods, apparatus and containers, window frames and the like, cutlery, tableware and gift articles, film casting strips and bauxite. The company employed around 4,400 workers and salaried employees. The company owned all the ordinary shares in Gemeinnützige Wohnungsgesellschaft "Arthur Krupp" GesmbH, Berndorf, and all the shares in J. C. Klinkosch AG, Vienna, with which there was a consolidated relationship. In the fall of 1960 all shares in the former foreign subsidiaries Societa per Azioni Italiana Metalli ed Argenteria Arthur Krupp, Milan and Berndorfer Metall-Werk AG, Lucerne were acquired.[3] The company was further consolidated in the form of a sectoral grouping.

In order to further combine nationalized industrial companies sector by sector, Vereinigte Wiener Metallwerke AG, Montanwerke Brixlegg GesmbH in return for shares in Österreichische Industrieverwaltungs-AG, and Metallwerk Möllersdorf AG in return for shares in the transferring company were merged with Vereinigte Metallwerke Ranshofen-Berndorf AG by absorption in 1974. In 1978, Berndorfer Aluminium-Verarbeitungs GesmbH, Berndorf, was merged by absorption. At about the same time, with the dispute over a commissioning of the Zwentendorf nuclear power plant, it became known that VMW Ranshofen, a major consumer of electrical energy, was receiving a blatantly favorable electricity price, which could be seen as a covert promotion of aluminum production.

In 1981, it was decided to build a can plant in Enzesfeld, Lower Austria, which went into operation in 1983.[4] This can plant was operated by Rexam from 1983–2016.

Restructuring to form Austria Metall AG under the umbrella of ÖIAG

In 1984, the final operations in Berndorf and Vienna became independent and were transformed into autonomous GesmbH's (Berndorf Metallwaren GesmbH was privatized 100% in 1988 in the form of a management buy-out). At the beginning of 1985, the company was renamed Austria Metall Aktiengesellschaft (AMAG).[5]

In the course of a structural concept for the operations of the ÖIAG Group adopted by Österreichische Industrieholding AG (ÖIAG), which, in accordance with the principle of coordinated decentralization, divided the old subgroups into smaller companies and reorganized them into industry groups according to the sectors to which they belonged, a far-reaching restructuring occurred at Austria Metall AG: With retroactive effect from January 1, 1987, Austria Metall AG hived off its operating functions into independent companies and concentrated exclusively on the functions of a holding company for the nonferrous metals sector.

The primary aluminum production and processing activities were transferred to AMAG Metall GesmbH, Ranshofen, the secondary aluminum business to Austria Sekundär-Aluminium GesmbH, Ranshofen, the copper smelter to Montanwerke Brixlegg GesmbH, Brixlegg (51% of this company was sold to Metallgesellschaft Austria AG, Vienna, in 1989), and the semi-finished copper product sector was spun off to Buntmetall Amstetten GesmbH, Amstetten (100% of this company was privatized in 1989 in the form of a management buyout).

At the beginning of 1990, the Group was again restructured and henceforth divided into six divisions:

AMAG Metal (tankhouses in Australia and Canada, remelting plants in Ranshofen, Wuppertal and Furth). AMAG Rolled Products (rolling mills in Ranshofen and Unna) AMAG Extrusion (BOAL Group, Aluminium Ranshofen Preßwerk GesmbH, AMAG AluTeam Extrusion AG, Aluminiumwerk Unna AG, AluTeam Metal Forming GmbH, Unna, AluTeam Wexal, Ireland) AMAG Formprodukte (foundry and forging companies in Austria, Germany, Hungary and France) AMAG Packaging (European Packaging Holding) AMAG Systems (processing of semi-finished rolled products, extrusion and cast products) From the Moulded Products Division, Aluminiumgießerei Villingen GmbH, Villingen-Schwenningen, Germany, was sold to Hans Joachim Schönberg in the fall of 1991.[6]

Privatization

AMAG Ranshofen with new hot and cold rolling mill AMAG Ranshofen with new hot and cold rolling mill (2018) AMAG was privatized in 1996. Through the management buy-out of Klaus Hammerer (40%) with participation of Constantia (40%) and Arbeitnehmer Privatstiftung (20%). In 2007, Hammerer's shares were sold to Constantia Packaging AG, with the exception of the former AMAG extrusion GmbH (press shop), which remains in Hammerer's ownership (now HAI Hammerer Aluminium Industries GmbH). In addition, the purchase of 10% of the employee foundation by Constantia was finally completed in November 2007.

In 2000, the can plant in Enzesfeld was sold to Rexam and has been part of the Ardagh Group since 2017.

Since April 8, 2011, the shares of AMAG Austria Metall AG have been traded on the official market (Prime Market) of the Vienna Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol "AMAG". From September 24, 2012 to September 23, 2013, the company was represented in the ATX. According to the company, it has been producing at 100 percent capacity utilization at the Ranshofen plant since 2010.

Since October 2014, B&C Industrieholding GmbH has held a voting majority of 52.7% in AMAG Austria Metall AG.[7]

In November 2014, AMAG opened the new hot rolling mill as well as the plate production and the expanded foundry at the Ranshofen site.[8] In June 2017, the new cold rolling mill and the associated finishing facilities were opened. In parallel, the foundry and recycling capacities were also expanded again. The EUR 535 million plant expansion was thus successfully completed. The Ranshofen site is thus home to the most modern aluminum rolling mill in Europe.[9]

In the 2017 financial year, AMAG's sales exceeded EUR 1 billion for the first time, sales volumes reached a new record of 421,700 tons, and recycling reached a new record of 348,000 tons of aluminum scrap used. AMAG is thus on a sustainable growth path with a target capacity of more than 300,000 tons in the rolled products sector.[10]

In September 2018, AMAG became the world's first integrated company with rolling mill, foundry and recycling to be certified according to the ASI Performance Standard.[11][12]

Corporate data

2020:

Sales (million €): 904.2

Employees: 1991


2018:[13]

Sales (€ million): 1,101.6

Employees: 1959


2017:[10]

Sales (€ million): 1,036.2

Employees: 1881


2016:[14]

Sales (€ million): 906.2

Employees: 1762


2015:[15]

Sales (€ million): 913.3

Employees: 1704


2014:[16]

Sales (€ million): 823.0

Employees: 1638


2013:

Sales (€ million): 786.4

Employees: 1564


2012:

Sales (€ million): 819.8

Employees: 1490


2011:

Sales (€ million): 813.1

Employees: 1,422


2010:

Sales (€ million): 728.0

Employees: 1,175

Operating companies and businesses

Key figures 2018[13]

AMAG rolling GmbH

AMAG casting GmbH

AMAG metal GmbH (metal trading company), handles the metal flow of the AMAG Group as a metal trading company and thus represents the Group's interface to the raw materials market.

Aluminerie Alouette

Employees AMAG metal GmbH (incl. 20 % personnel share in Aluminerie Alouette): 188

Sales volume AMAG metal GmbH: 114,900 tons

Sales AMAG metal GmbH (million €): 785.6

AMAG service GmbH (site services)

Manufactured products

Austria Metall AG is a leading supplier of:

Individual references

  1. 1 HISTORY (Memento of February 21, 2018 in the Internet Archive), amag.at.
  2. 2 Annual report 2018. in: amag-al4u.com. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  3. 3 Finanz Compass Österreich 1961, page 643 (direct link via ZEDHIA to p. 643).
  4. 4 Now fixed: can plant in Enzesfeld. In: Arbeiter-Zeitung. Vienna October 15, 1981, p. 10 (The website of the Arbeiter-Zeitung is currently being redesigned. The linked pages are therefore not accessible. – Digital copy).
  5. 5 Finanz Compass Österreich 1987/88, p. 1319 (direct link via ZEDHIA to p. 1319)
  6. 6 Finanz Compass Österreich 1992/93, page 69 (direct link via ZEDHIA to p. 69)
  7. 7 Wirtschaftsblatt.at: Oberbank largely withdraws from Amag. October 16, 2014, archived from the original on October 18, 2014; retrieved August 28, 2015.
  8. 8 AMAG: New hot rolling mill in Ranshofen puts AMAG in the top league. (No longer available online.) In: www.AMAG.at. AMAG, November 25, 2014, archived from the original on April 9, 2018; retrieved April 9, 2018.
  9. 9 AMAG: AMAG opens Europe's most modern aluminum cold rolling mill. In: www.AMAG.at. AMAG, June 23, 2017; retrieved April 9, 2018.
  10. 10 AMAG: AMAG Annual Report 2017. (No longer available online.) AMAG, February 27, 2018, archived from the original on February 27, 2018; retrieved February 27, 2018 (German).
  11. 11 AMAG Austria Metall AG: AMAG certifies itself for the ASI Performance Standard. Retrieved December 17, 2018.
  12. 12 AMAG Austria Metall AG. In: Aluminium Stewardship Initiative. Retrieved December 17, 2018 (English).
  13. 13 AMAG Austria Metall AG: Annual Report 2018. In: www.amag-al4u.com. AMAG Austria Metall AG, February 28, 2019, accessed February 28, 2019.
  14. 14 Archived copy (Memento of February 27, 2018 at the Internet Archive).
  15. 15 AMAG: AMAG annual report 2015. in: AMAG. AMAG, retrieved February 21, 2018 (German).
  16. 16 Annual Report 2014 (PDF)


Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lenzing AG</span>

The Lenzing Group is an international group with its headquarters in Lenzing, Austria, and production sites in all major markets. Lenzing produces wood-based viscose fibers, modal fibers, lyocell fibers and filament yarn, which are used in the textile industry - in clothing, home textiles and technical textiles - as well as in the nonwovens industry. In addition, the company is active in mechanical and plant engineering. The Lenzing Group markets its products under the brand names TENCEL, VEOCEL, LENZING ECOVERO and LENZING.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aluminerie Alouette</span>

Aluminerie Alouette is an aluminum manufacturing company based in Sept-Îles, Quebec, Canada, on the North Shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

The Österreichische Beteiligungs AG is an Austrian state-owned holding company that can be characterized as a sovereign wealth fund. It administers the investments of the Republic of Austria in partially or entirely nationalized companies. It is headquartered in Vienna.

Voestalpine AG – stylized as voestalpine – is an Austrian steel-based technology and capital goods group based in Linz, Austria. The company is active in steel, automotive, railway systems, profilform and tool steel industries. As of 2017, it is one of the few profitable steel companies in Europe.

Rheinmetall Automotive is the Automotive sector of the parent group Rheinmetall. The company emerged in 1997 through the merger of KS Kolbenschmidt GmbH, Neckarsulm, and Pierburg GmbH, Neuss. Hence, at its various traditional locations the company is commonly known as Kolbenschmidt or Pierburg. 40 production plants in Europe, the Americas, Japan, India and China employ a total workforce of around 11,000. Products are developed in cooperation with international auto manufacturers. Rheinmetall Automotive ranks among the 100 biggest auto industry suppliers worldwide and is an important partner to the industry for such products as exhaust gas recirculation systems, secondary-air systems, coolant pumps, and pistons for car gasoline engines and as well as for the commercial vehicle sector.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Berndorf, Lower Austria</span> Place in Lower Austria, Austria

Berndorf is a town in the district of Baden in Lower Austria in Austria. Because of its historic development in the 19th century it is also referred to as the Krupp town.

Benteler International AG (BENTELER) is a holding company in German family ownership. The Group companies operate worldwide in the fields of automotive technology, steel and tube production and engineering. The headquarters of Benteler International AG is in Salzburg (Austria), as of 2010. The owner is the Benteler family.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aleris</span>

Aleris Corporation was an American aluminum rolled products producer, based in Beachwood, Ohio. The company had approximately 5,000 employees globally as of mid 2015.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Andritz AG</span> Austrian company

Andritz AG is an international technology group, offering plants, equipment, systems and services for various industries. The group's headquarters are in Graz, Austria. The group gets its name from the district of Andritz in which it is located and is listed on the Vienna Stock Exchange.

Porsche Holding GmbH, also known as Porsche Holding Salzburg, is the largest car distributor in Europe. In 2011, the company was sold by the Porsche family and Porsche SE to Volkswagen AG, which is the majority owner of the company.

Beyond Gravity is the space-oriented segment of the Swiss technology group RUAG. At a total of fourteen sites in Switzerland, Sweden, Finland (Tampere), Germany (Coswig), USA and Austria, Beyond Gravity employs around 1,265 people and posted sales of 339 million Swiss Francs in 2019. As a supplier of Arianespace, Beyond Gravity is also a shareholder, with 0.82% of capital in 2018.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aurubis</span> Second largest producer of copper in the world

Aurubis AG is a global supplier of non-ferrous metals and one of the world's largest copper recyclers. The company processes complex metal concentrates, scrap, organic and inorganic metal-bearing recycling materials and industrial residues into metals. Aurubis produces more than 1 million tons of copper cathodes per year and from these a variety of products such as wire rod, continuous cast shapes, profiles and flat rolled products in copper and copper alloys. Aurubis also produces a range of other metals, including precious metals, selenium, lead, nickel, tin and zinc. The portfolio also includes other products such as sulphuric acid and iron silicate.

Maschinenfabrik Liezen und Gießerei GesmbH is a foundry and mechanical engineering company based in Liezen, Austria. The company's origins date to 1939 when a factory was established in Liezen for war materials production. Post WWII the company "Hütte Liezen" entered state control and became a subsidiary to VÖEST in the 1950s. During the 1980s the company was involved in the 'Noricom' arms scandal due to its production of heavy artillery which were illegally exported.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Diehl Metall</span>

Diehl Metall is a corporate division of the Diehl Stiftung & Co. KG, a worldwide operating industrial group with its head office in Röthenbach an der Pegnitz near Nuremberg, Germany. The production units of Diehl Metall are situated at 13 locations in Europe, Asia, South America and the US. With 3,420 employees the company generated a turnover of €917 million in 2017. Diehl Metall produces semi-finished products, forgings and rolled products, high-precision stamped parts with plating technologies as well as Schempp+Decker press-fit zones and metal-plastic compound systems. The company provides material development and production, sheet metal forming and forging technology as well as plating, press-fit, overmolding and assembling technology completely in-house.

Veritas AG is an international, automotive corporation based in Gelnhausen, Germany, in the Main-Kinzig circle of the Hessen state. The family-owned company employs today over 4,300 people worldwide. In 2011 the turnover of the company was around €580 million.

Primetals Technologies Limited, is an engineering and plant construction company headquartered in London, United Kingdom, with numerous locations worldwide. It serves clients in the metals industry, both the ferrous and the nonferrous metals sector. It was established as a joint venture between Siemens VAI Metals Technologies and Mitsubishi-Hitachi Metals Machinery in 2015. As of 2020, Primetals Technologies is a joint venture of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and partners.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rudolf Streicher</span> Austrian politician

Rudolf Streicher is a former Austrian politician. He has served in the government of Austria as Minister of Transport and Economy from June 1986 to April 1992. Streicher is a member of the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ).

Otto Metzger was a German-British engineer, and inventor of an impact-extrusion process for forming seamless zinc and brass cans.

InternormInternational GmbH is an Austrian brand founded in 1931 that specializes in the manufacture of windows and doors. Its headquarters are located in Traun, Upper Austria. The company is a family business, currently run by the third generation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">VDM Metals</span> German manufacturer of corrosion-resistant, heat-resistant nickel and cobalt alloys

VDM Metals Group based in Werdohl, Germany, is a manufacturer of corrosion-resistant, heat-resistant and high-temperature nickel alloys, cobalt and zirconium alloys as well as high-alloyed special stainless steels. These materials are used in the chemical process industry, the oil and gas industry, aerospace, automotive and electronics / electrical engineering. VDM Metals operates production sites in Germany and the United States. The company employs about 2,000 people worldwide.