Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Bakrie Sumatera Plantations was founded in 1911 as N.V. Hollandsch Amerikaanse Plantage Maatschappij, opening its first rubber plantation in Kisaran. [3] In the late 1910s, the company was acquired by United States Rubber Plantation Inc., Sumatra, a subsidiary of United States Rubber Company (USRC).
Through PT. Bakrie Sumatra Plantations, Bakrie Group managed an estimated 100,000 ha of rubber and palm oil plantation in the island of Sumatra. [28] Bakrie Sumatera Plantations Tbk (BSP) is a subsidiary of Bakrie Group. [28] BSP has extensive landbanks. [29] One of its directors is Bungaran Saragih, a former minister of agriculture.
Anindya Novyan Bakrie (Indonesian: [ænɪndɪə nˈɑːvɪən bˈækɹi]; born 10 November 1974), is an Indonesian businessman and investor who is the CEO and President of Bakrie & Brothers, the successor to the Bakrie Group, one of the oldest conglomerates in Indonesia that is now transitioning towards the renewable sector. [1]
Bakrie may refer to the following family of Indonesian businesspeople and related organizations: Aburizal Bakrie (born 1946), son of Achmad, father of Anindya; Achmad Bakrie, father of Aburizal Bakrie Group, an Indonesian conglomerate founded by Achmad Bakrie in 1942; Bakrie Sumatera Plantations, an agricultural subsidiary of Bakrie Group
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Most of the managers of the tobacco plantations and half the managers of the rubber, tea and oil plantations were Dutch, but there were also other Europeans and Americans. As of 1930, there were 275,233 Javanese and 26,703 Chinese plantation workers, and the original inhabitants were a minority. [20] [21] [22]
PT Bumi Resources Tbk is one of the largest mining companies in Indonesia and is structured as a holding company. [3] In the 2012 Forbes Global 2000, Bumi Resources was ranked as the 1898th-largest public company in the world. [4] It is the biggest producer of thermal coal in Indonesia and is majority owned by the Bakrie Group. [5]
The Sidoarjo mud flow is the result of an erupting mud volcano [4] in the subdistrict of Porong, Sidoarjo in East Java, Indonesia that has been in eruption since May 2006. It is the biggest mud volcano in the world; responsibility for it was credited to the blowout of a natural gas well drilled by Lapindo Brantas, although some scientists [5] and company officials contend it was caused by a ...