Fuji Electric
Headquarters at Gate City Ōsaki in Ōsaki, Tokyo | |
Native name | 富士電機株式会社 |
---|---|
Romanized name | Fuji Denki kabushiki gaisha |
Company type | Public KK |
Traded as | TYO: 6504 Nikkei 225 component |
Industry | Electrical equipment |
Founded | (August 29, 1923; 100 years ago (1923-08-29)) |
Headquarters | Gate City Ohsaki, East Tower, Ōsaki, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 141-0032, Japan |
Key people | Michihiro Kitazawa[1] (President and Chairman of the Board) |
Products | see Divisions & Products |
Revenue | JPY 276.8 billion (FY 2016) (US$ 1.54 billion) (FY 2016) |
Net income | JPY 19.6 billion (FY 2013) (US$ 190.2 million million) (FY 2013) |
Number of employees | 26,503 (consolidated, as of March 31, 2017) |
Website | Official website |
Footnotes / references [2] |
Fuji Electric Co., Ltd. (富士電機株式会社, Fuji Denki Kabushiki-gaisha), operating under the brand name FE, is a Japanese electrical equipment company, manufacturing pressure transmitters, flowmeters, gas analyzers, controllers, inverters, pumps, generators, ICs, motors, and power equipment.[3]
History
Fuji Electric was established in 1923 as a capital and technology tie-up between Furukawa Electric, a spinoff from Furukawa zaibatsu company, and Siemens AG.[4][5] The name "Fuji" is derived from Furukawa's "Fu" and Siemens' "Ji", since German pronunciation of Siemens is written jiimensu in Japanese romanization. The characters used to write Mount Fuji were used as ateji.
In 1935, Fuji Electric spun off the telephone department as Fuji Tsushinki (lit. Fuji Communications Equipment, now Fujitsu).[4]
Divisions and products
- Power and social infrastructure
- Industrial infrastructure
- Transmission and distribution equipment — joint venture with Schneider Electric[6]
- Industrial power supply equipment
- Industrial drive systems
- Heating and induction furnace equipment
- Plant control and measurement systems
- Radiation monitoring systems
- Power electronics
- Inverters/servo systems
- Transportation power electronics
- Uninterruptible power supply systems
- Power conditioners
- Power distribution and control equipment
- Electronic devices
- Food and beverage distribution
- Vending machines
- Retail distribution systems
- Currency handling equipment
- Freezing and refrigerated showcases
Source
References
- ^ "Management".
- ^ "Corporate Data". Fuji Electric. Retrieved April 1, 2015.
- ^ "Company Snapshot". Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved April 1, 2015.
- ^ a b Stuart D. B. Picken (September 2, 2009). The A to Z of Japanese Business. Scarecrow Press. pp. 90–92. ISBN 978-0-8108-7035-2.
- ^ Takafusa Nakamura; Kōnosuke Odaka (2003). The Economic History of Japan, 1600-1990: Economic history of Japan, 1914-1955 : a dual structure. Oxford University Press. p. 207. ISBN 978-0-19-828907-4.
- ^ "Schneider-Fuji JV will have sales worth more than €450m". Drives & Controls. DFA Media. August 28, 2008. Retrieved April 2, 2015.
External links
- Fuji Electric Group (in English)
- List of Fuji Electric Systems Distributors (in English)
- "Company history books (Shashi)". Shashi Interest Group. April 2016. Wiki collection of bibliographic works on Fuji Electric
- v
- t
- e
- 7&i
- Advantest
- ÆON
- AGC
- Ajinomoto
- Alps
- ANA
- Amada
- Aozora Bank
- Asahi Breweries
- Asahi Kasei
- Astellas
- Bandai Namco Holdings
- Bridgestone
- Canon
- Casio
- Chiba Bank
- Chiyoda
- Chuden
- Chugai
- Citizen Holdings
- Comsys
- Concordia Financial
- Credit Saison
- Dai-ichi Life
- Daiichi Sankyo
- Daikin
- Daiwa House
- Daiwa Securities
- Denka
- Denso
- Dentsu
- DNP
- Dowa
- Ebara
- Eisai
- ENEOS
- Fanuc
- Fast Retailing
- Fuji Electric
- Fujifilm
- Fujikura
- Fujitsu
- Fukuoka Financial
- Furukawa Group
- Furukawa Electric
- GS Yuasa
- Heiwa Real Estate
- Hino
- Hitachi
- Hitachi Construction Machinery
- Hitz
- Hokuetsu Paper
- Honda
- IHI
- INPEX
- Isetan-Mitsukoshi
- Isuzu
- Itochu
- JFE
- J. Front Retailing
- JGC
- JR Central
- JR East
- JR West
- JSW
- JT
- JTEKT
- Kajima
- KEPCO
- Kao
- Kawasaki
- KDDI
- Keio
- Keisei
- Keyence
- Kikkoman
- Kirin
- K Line
- Kobelco
- Komatsu
- Konami
- Konica Minolta
- Kubota
- Kuraray
- Kyocera
- Kyowa Hakko Kirin
- Marubeni
- Maruha Nichiro
- Marui
- Matsui Securities
- Mazda
- Meidensha
- Meiji Holdings
- MES
- Minebea
- Mitsubishi Chemical
- Mitsubishi Corporation
- Mitsubishi Electric
- Mitsubishi Estate
- Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
- Mitsubishi Logistics
- Mitsubishi Materials
- Mitsubishi Motors
- Mitsui & Co
- Mitsui Chemicals
- Mitsui Fudosan
- Mitsui Kinzoku
- Mitsumi Electric
- Mizuho
- MOL
- MS&AD
- MUFG
- Murata Manufacturing
- NEC
- Nexon
- NEG
- NGK
- Nichirei
- Nikon
- Nintendo
- Nippon Express
- Nippon Kayaku
- Nippon Light Metal
- Nippon Ham
- Nippon Paper Industries
- Nippon Soda
- Nissan Motor Company
- Nissan Chemical
- Nisshin Seifun
- Nisshin Steel
- Nissui
- Nittobo
- Nitto Denko
- Sompo Japan Nipponkoa Holdings
- Nomura
- NSG
- NSK
- NSSMC
- NTN
- NTT
- NTT Data
- NYK
- Obayashi
- Odakyu
- Oji Holdings Corporation
- OKI
- Okuma
- Olympus
- Osaka Gas
- Pacific Metals
- Panasonic
- Pioneer
- Resona
- Ricoh
- Sapporo Holdings
- SCREEN
- Secom
- Sekisui House
- Sharp
- Shimz
- Shin-Etsu
- Shinsei Bank
- Shionogi
- Shiseido
- Shizuoka Bank
- Showa Denko
- Showa Shell
- SoftBank
- Sojitz
- Sony
- Subaru Corporation
- SUMCO
- Sumitomo Chemical
- Sumitomo Corporation
- Sumitomo Electric
- Sumitomo Heavy Industries
- Sumitomo Metal Mining
- Sumitomo Mitsui Financial
- Sumitomo Mitsui Trust
- Sumitomo Osaka Cement
- Sumitomo Pharma
- Sumitomo Realty
- Suzuki
- T&D
- Taiheiyo Cement
- Taisei
- Taiyo Yuden
- Takara
- Takashimaya
- Takeda
- TDK
- Teijin
- TEPCO
- Terumo
- Tobu
- Toho
- Toho Zinc
- Tokai Carbon
- Tokuyama Corporation
- Tokio Marine
- Tokyo Dome
- Tokyo Electron
- Tokyo Gas
- Tokyo Tatemono
- Tokyu
- Tokyu Land
- Toppan
- Toray
- Toshiba
- Tosoh
- Toto
- Toyobo
- Toyota
- Toyota Tsusho
- Trend Micro
- UBE
- Unitika
- Uny
- Yahoo! Japan
- Yamaha
- Yamato Transport
- Yasakawa
- Yokogawa Electric
- Yokohama Rubber