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CCL Industries, Inc., is an American-Canadian company founded in 1951. It describes itself as the world's largest label maker. [3] It is listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, and is an S&P/TSX 60 Component. CCL consists of five divisions – CCL Label, CCL Container, Avery, Checkpoint, and Innovia.
On June 30, 1977, Checkpoint was spun off from its parent company and began trading on NASDAQ under the symbol CHECK. [2]Within the next twenty years, Checkpoint Systems implemented RF electronic article surveillance (EAS) across different stores and in October 1993, the company's common stock began trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol CKP.
The Avery logo designed by Saul Bass in 1975 was used exclusively on office products by CCL Industries, which was allowed to license the logo when it purchased Avery Dennison's office products business in July 2013, until it was replaced sometime around the late-2010s with a new visual identity designed by Chermayeff & Geismar & Haviv.
Innovia Films, a division of CCL Industries, is an international manufacturer and supplier of biaxially-oriented polypropylene (BOPP) films for speciality packaging, labelling, tobacco overwrap and industrial products. It was once known as UCB Films.
Darbhanga House, Headquarters of Central Coalfields Limited (CCL), Ranchi, Jharkhand. Central Coalfields Limited (CCL) is a subsidiary of Coal India Limited (CIL), an undertaking of the Government of India. CCL was established in 1956 as National Coal Development Corporation Limited and is a Category-I Mini Ratna company since October 2007.
1987: The motor division of ETL was restructured as Chiaphua Components Limited (CCL), a new subsidiary of Chiaphua Industries. 1989: A technical partnership was established with Matoba Electric Manufacturing Co. Ltd. in Japan to further enhance its manufacturing know-how. 1992: CCL was spun off from Chiaphua Industries as an independent company.
CCI was founded by Dick Speer (brother of Vernon Speer, who founded Speer Bullets) in the early 1950s. Arvid Nelson was a partner in the business.
While NPA was initially involved in the production of the polymer substrate, a subsidiary company was created in 1996 that effectively removed NPA from this aspect of the banknote supply chain. Today, polymer substrate is manufactured in Australia by CCL Secure, which is wholly owned by CCL Industries, a Canadian