UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION


Meaning of UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION in English

major American manufacturer of chemicals, petrochemicals, and related products. Headquarters are in Danbury, Conn., U.S. The company was formed in 1917 as Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation, acquiring four earlier companies: Linde Air Products Company (established 1907), National Carbon Company (1899), Prest-O-Lite Company, Inc. (1913), and Union Carbide Company (1898). It assumed its present name in 1957. Formed during wartime, the company immediately took on the manufacture of new diversified products, providing helium, ferrozirconium, and activated carbon for the U.S. military, thus setting the pattern for the company's future development. After World War I, it retained its chemicals business and moved into the consumer field, becoming one of the first companies to use market research to discover potential consumer needs and creating products to fill them. Early products of this type were the first antifreeze, Prestone, and the first batteries for portable radios, under the Eveready brand. World War II further expanded the company's research and development activities. Union Carbide was a major contributor to the development of the first atomic bomb. Union Carbide had already become a pioneer in the manufacture of petrochemicals. It also produced plastics, industrial gases, metals and carbon products, and electronics and medical products. In 198687, however, it sold many of its home and automobile products businesses (such as those for batteries, waxes, and antifreeze). On Dec. 3, 1984, Union Carbide's pesticide plant in Bhopal, India, was the scene of one of the worst industrial accidents in history when poisonous gas leaked and spread over a populated area, killing about 2,500 people and injuring many more. Suits for damages were brought against the company, and in 1989 India's Supreme Court ordered Union Carbide to pay $470 million in compensation to the victims of the accident.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.