ChemChina has completed its $43 billion takeover of Swiss pesticide and seed giant Syngenta, the companies said, in the biggest overseas acquisition so far by a Chinese firm. The deal combines Syngenta, a global leader in seeds and crop protection, with ChemChina which controls Adama, the largest supplier of generic crop protection products in Europe.
It is part of a broader wave of consolidation in the agro-chemicals sector that has worried environmental activists and farmers. ChemChina - also known as China National Chemical Corp - made its offer for Syngenta in February 2016, but the takeover had to await the green light from regulators.
US and European Union authorities approved the deal in April despite growing resistance on both sides of the Atlantic to blockbuster takeovers by Chinese companies. China itself has sought to rein in the foreign buying spree by its firms over concerns about capital flight and bad loans, reversing course after previously encouraging such ventures abroad.
ChemChina pledged to sell part of Adama's pesticide business and take other steps, to gain regulatory approval. "All our stakeholders are benefiting from this change of ownership. Jobs have been safeguarded and farmers will continue to have a choice and enjoy the benefits of our investments in technology," Syngenta vice chairman Michel Demare said in a statement Tuesday. Syngenta will remain a standalone company and the existing management team will continue to run it.
Comments
Comments are closed.