We help industries solve their toughest water, wastewater and process challenges. We work with customers across all industries, including food & beverage, metals and mining, power, chemicals & pharma, oil & gas downstream and petrochemicals, upstream oil & gas, pulp and paper, and utilities.
Also, does GE own SUEZ?
BOSTON – October 02, 2017 – GE (NYSE: GE) announced today it completed the closing of the sale of GE Water & Process Technologies to SUEZ for $3.4 billion on September 30, 2017.
Beside this, is Suez a good company?
Good place to work. Company operates 24/7/365. Management is typically reasonable and workable. Pay is fair, benefits are pretty competitive and start on first day.
Is SUEZ a part of GE?
becomes part of GE.
provides us with a totally new product and service offering that addresses the needs of a US$12 billion global industry segment.
Is Suez water a public company?
It owns and operates 16 water and waste water utilities, and operates 90 municipal water and waste water systems through public-private partnerships and contract agreements.
| Type | Subsidiary |
|---|---|
| Products | Water treatment, waste management |
| Revenue | $764 million (2013) |
| Number of employees | 2,350 (2013) |
| Parent | Suez Environnement |
What does Suez stand for?
SUEZ
| Acronym | Definition |
|---|---|
| SUEZ | Sezione Ulivo Extra Zone (Italian political organization) |
What kind of company is SUEZ?
Where are GE water softeners made?
In 2016, Haier bought GE Appliances. Haier, a home appliance company in China, actually builds the water softening products and then uses the GE logo to market it.
Who bought GE Betz?
Hercules Incorporated announced today that it has completed the sale of the Water Treatment Services business of its BetzDearborn Division to GE Specialty Materials, a unit of General Electric Company. The move launches GE into a new business segment and adds $1 billion in annual sales to GE Specialty Materials.
Who bought GE Water?
Who owns Suez Australia?
Australia’s biggest waste management company, Cleanaway, has been given the green light by the competition regulator to proceed with the $501 million acquisition of two rubbish dumps and five waste transfer stations in Sydney from French giant Suez.