Company headquarters building | |
Native name | DOWAホールディングス株式会社 |
|---|---|
| Company type | PublicKK |
| TYO:5714 NAG:5714 FSE:5714 Nikkei 225 component | |
| ISIN | JP3638600001 |
| Industry | Nonferrous metals |
| Founded | (September 18, 1884; 141 years ago (1884-09-18)) |
| Founder | Denzaburo Fujita |
| Headquarters | Akihabara UDX building,Sotokanda,Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, 101-0021 ,Japan |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Akira Sekiguchi[1][2] (President) |
| Products | |
| Services |
|
| Revenue | |
Number of employees | 6,400 (as of March 31, 2018) |
| Subsidiaries | Dowa Metals and Mining Dowa Eco-System Dowa Electronics Materials Dowa Metal Tech Dowa Thermotech |
| Website | Official website |
| Footnotes / references [3][4][5] | |
Dowa Holdings (DOWAホールディングス株式会社,DOWA Hōrudingusu Kabushiki-gaisha) is a Japanesenonferrous metals manufacturer.[5] The company is a component of theNikkei 225stock index.[6]
Fujita-gumi, the forerunner of DOWA,[7] was established by three brothers fromYamaguchi prefecture in 1881. The brothers had personal connections with influential members of the government, so in 1884 they bought theKosaka mine, from which they expanded their business into various fields, centered on the coal mining business.[8] After the purchase, Fujita-gumi increased its capital and invested heavily in skilled labor and equipment. By 1888, theKosaka mine became Japan's top producer of silver.[8]
In 1900, an engineer at Kosaka succeeded in extracting copper by accessingkuroko (black ore — a mixture of copper, zinc and lead) deep in the mine. After that, Kosaka changed its focus from silver to copper, and in 1907, became Japan's largest copper producer.[7]
Dowa Mining was an early developer ofYuzawa, a hot spring town usinggeothermal energy, in the late 20th century.[9]
As of April 2007, Dowa Holdings was Japan's largest silver smelter.[10]
Dowa Holdings built a recycling plant in Kosaka which has been operating since 2008, extracting minerals and valuable metals from old electronics parts. One of its subsidiaries, Kosaka Smelting and Refining, has reclaimed rare materials including gold, indium, andantimony. In 2010, the company was working on methods to reclaimrare-earth elements, which are harder to mine, such asneodymium anddysprosium.[11]
As of 2010, Dowa was one of the top three zinc producers in Japan.[12] As of 2016, Dowa Holdings possessed the technology for recovering 22 metals, includinggermanium,ruthenium,gallium, andselenium.[13] In 2017, Dowa Holdings was involved in recycling efforts by sorting through electronics wastes in search for gold, platinum,palladium, and additional rare metals.[14] As of 2018, Dowa Holdings had more than 6,000 employees.[15]
In April 2023, Mitsubishi Materials Corp took full ownership of Onahama Smelting & Refining after purchasing its stake in Dowa Holdings andFurukawa Co.[16]
As of July 2023, Dowa Holdings was the top producer worldwide of high-purity gallium.[17] In 2024, Dowa filed a patent for gold plating.[18] In 2024, Dowa was granted a patent for copper plating.[19]
Dowa's main business is in the recycling and metal processing.[20] Dowa has six business segments; Environment and Recycling, Smelting & Refining, Electronic Materials, Metal Processing, Heat Treatment, and Other which is real estate leasing, construction, management, and technical support services.[21][22]
Dowa Holdings has several subsidiaries, including Dowa Eco-System, Dowa Metals and Mining, Dowa Electronics Materials,[23][24] Dowa Metal Tech,[25] and Dowa Thermotech.[26]
In 2010,Dowa Metals & Mining Co. was the fourth-largest copper smelter in Japan.[27] As of January 2024, the company owned the largest zinc smelter in Japan.[28]
Dowa Eco-System manages waste and recycling in Asia, and runs a plant in Singapore which works to recover precious and nonferrous metals.[29] In 2016, Dowa Eco-System partnered with Padaeng Industry Plc (PDI) to build industrial waste management factories.[30][31] It developed the technology for Singapore’s first vertical waste incinerator.[32]
Dowa Electronics Materials was the largest supplier ofindium in Japan as of 2010.[33]
In November 2017, auto supplierDowa Metal Tech opened an $11 million plant in Guanajuato, Mexico.[25]
Dowa Thermotech manufactures furnaces and provides heat protection treatments. In 2018, it invested $22.5 million to build a plant in North Carolina.[34][35]
In 1999, Dowa Mining and Inco partnered to extract metals in Turkey and Indonesia.[36][37]
In 2019, Dowa Holdings and Constantine Metal Resources engaged in a joint venture called the Palmer Project to develop an underground mine in Southeast Alaska.[38] In 2023, an upgrade and expansion drill program began in the project. Dowa Metals & Mining owned 55% of the venture.[39]
Dowa Metals & Mining America was a vital buyer of raw metals supplied by New Jersey-based firm DG Auto Parts LLC. After Dowa evaluated the PRP dust that it received, it would pay its suppliers and refine the dust into chunks in their refinery. The chunks would then be shipped to Tanaka Precious Metals in Akita, where they would be prepared for sale. Between 2018 and 2022, Tanaka Precious Metals' annual revenue increased by approximately 20% to $288 million.[40][41]
Navin Khanna and Tinu Khanna of DG Auto Parts and co-conspirator Tyler Curtis would later be implicated in a state theft ring, responsible for thousands ofcatalytic converter thefts across the US. Between March 2021 and April 2022, a total of $224 million was transferred by Dowa into a single account used by DG Auto Parts. A further $175 million was discovered on another account. Over the course of their investigation, police discovered that Dowa Metals & Mining America had paid $545 million in revenue to DG Auto Parts. Despite surveillance and bank records proving Dowa to be the source of DG Auto Parts' money, the company's name was withheld during the indictments against Curtis and the Khannas, only being referred to as an unindictedco-conspirator.[40][41]
Tulsa street crimes unit supervisor, Lieutenant Brad Staggs stated the indictments had drastically cut the rate of catalytic converter thefts, saying "in the four months prior to that national takedown day, there were 250 reports of catalytic converter theft. In the four months after, there were 38."[41] According to the NICB, by 2023 reports of catalytic converter thefts had declined significantly nationwide. In the first nine months of 2023, there were 2,675 catalytic converter thefts reported per month, down from over 5,000 in 2022.[42]
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link){{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link){{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link){{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link){{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)