Looking at the development of China's LED industry from the craftsmanship of German lighting
2021-10
In the field of German lighting, OSRAM, one of the two world-renowned lighting companies, is an empire that cannot be bypassed. The company was founded in 1919 (OSRAM brand is 1906), and its name is taken from two kinds of incandescent lamps in German. The basic metal materials osmium Osmium and tungsten Wolfram. Its headquarters is currently located in the Garching high-tech park in the northern part of Munich, the capital of Bavaria, Germany.
In 2013, OSRAM was spun off from Siemens as an independent IPO. It had five business divisions earlier: CLB (traditional lighting and ballast), LLS (LED lighting and systems), LSS (lighting solutions and systems, including solution division LS) And digital lighting system DS department), SP (special lighting) and OS (optoelectronic semiconductor). In 2016, it dismantled the light source business to form a new company, LEDVANCE, and sold a Chinese consortium led by Mulinsen for 500 million euros.
Osram also includes the acquired Sylvania (North American market), Siteco (professional lighting), Traxon (solutions), Clay Paky (stage lighting), LED Engin (special lighting), LUX365 (e-commerce platform) and other brands.
It has many factories all over the world, including Augsburg (compact fluorescent lamp, straight fluorescent lamp, glass, equipment), Eichstatt (civil halogen lamp and LED), Herbrechtingen (car halogen lamp), Schwabmunchen (light source), Berlin (civil and automotive metal halide lamps) and Regensburg (LED epitaxy and chips and OLED), etc.
Other factories in other countries include France St.Quentin (incandescent lamps and halogen lamps, entertainment lighting fixtures), Italy Treviso (ballast), Czech Republic Bruntal (light source), Slovakia Nove Zamky (incandescent lamps, HID and miscellaneous), Bulgaria Plovdiv ( Intelligent LED lighting system), Moscow (fluorescent lamp) of Russia, Chennai (fluorescent lamp) of India, Malaysia (Kulim's epitaxial chip & Penang's chip packaging), as well as Exeter of the United States (closed) and Hillsboro, Drummondville (closed) in North America, and Drummondville, Canada. Closed), Monterrey, Mexico and other factories.
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