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Zama Group

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zama Group
FormerlyShinagawa Die-Casting Co. Ltd.[1]
Industrymanufacturing
FoundedSeptember 1, 1952
FounderKato Jiro
HeadquartersHong Kong,
China
Number of locations
Japan, United States, China, Philippines[2] (2019)
Area served
worldwide[3]
Key people
Jan-Grigor Schubert (Group President), William Yang (VP Production / President Legal Entity China), Thorsten König (VP Commercial), Randy Sherman (VP Sales), Mamoru Toda (VP development), Ronald Wienholts (VP Operations / President & Managing Director Legal Entity Philippines)[4]
Productselectronic fuel injection (EFI) systems, carburetors, oil pumps, solenoid valves, chain tensioning systems,[5] output shafts, solutions for fuel management, customer specific machined parts
Production output
12 million carburetors, 4 million oil-pumps (2019)
OwnerStihl International GmbH
Number of employees
2414 (2019)
Websitehttp://www.zamacorp.com/

Zama Group is a family-held German-owned company and a manufacturer of diaphragm carburetors, oil pumps and further mechanical precision engine components. Their headquarters are in Hong Kong, China. Zama supplies mainly to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) of gasoline-powered outdoor tools,[6] such as Stihl, Husqvarna or Yamabiko. It claims itself to be the technology leader in their industry.[2]

History

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Zama was founded on 1 September 1952 as Shinagawa Die-Casting Co. Ltd. in Shinagawa City Tokyo, Japan by Kato Jiro. With 20 employees, Zama primarily focused on producing Automobile parts for Japanese companies. In 1962 the company was moved to Zama City, Kanagawa Prefecture near Yokohama, Japan which had an influence on the later name of the company: Zama. In July 1975, the number of employees had reached approximately 200, and Zama entered into the carburetor business, which is their core business area today.[1]

Expansion

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In September 1981, the first location abroad was established in Torrance, California, United States as USA Zama Inc. to support the Headquarters in Japan by marketing, importing and delivering Zama carburetors to American customers. After four years another factory was opened in Iwate, Japan which specialized in diaphragm carburetor assembly as well as die designing and tooling. In March 1989, Zama Industries was founded in Hong Kong to reduce the negative impact on revenue caused by a sudden change of the currency exchange rate of JPY and USD. Another facility was opened in November 1990 in Franklin, Tennessee, USA to expand the US operations in engineering and to establish a Zama aftermarket department. In August 1991, a second factory with 400 employees was opened in Iwate, Japan to meet the demands for more capacity. The factory was opened for die-casting and machining for automobile parts. By the end of 1991, a factory with 450 employees was opened in the Special Economic Zone of XiLi, Shenzhen, China and major parts of the Hong Kong facilities were moved there. The main focus of this facility is the production of diaphragm carburetors. Due to the strong growth, the factory was extended in 1997 and in 2000. In 2006, when direct labor headcount had surpassed 1,000 employees, all production facilities were consolidated in one factory site in Shenzhen and a die-casting and storage facility in Hong Kong.[1] Due to rising risk of only one main production site,[7][8] Zama decided to open a second main production facility in Santo Tomas, Batangas, Philippines which was inaugurated in January 2016. In 2018 the XiLi factories were relocated to a new factory in Huizhou, China[9] due to municipal plans to remodel the former industrial area of XiLi into a commercial/residential zone.

Development of product variety

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Starting out with the production and distribution of die-casting products, Zama developed into the world’s largest manufacturer of diaphragm carburetors[10] and sells further products nowadays.[11] Zama's first carburetor was produced in 1975, and the production of oil pumps was initiated in 2003. Further milestones for Zama were the production of their first electronic carburetor in 2009 and the production of their first solenoid valve in 2016.[1]

Group structure

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Stihl Holding

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The Zama group is part of the Stihl Holding AG & Co. KG which is headquartered in Waiblingen, Germany. The Zama factories are subsidiaries owned 100% by the Stihl International GmbH.[12]

Locations of Zama group and tasks

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Zama operates in five locations around the world. Zama Corporation in Hong Kong is the administrative, financial and logistic center of the Zama Group, and distributes more than 14 million carburetors worldwide, making use of the excellent logistic and financial facilities in Hong Kong. Zama Precision Industries (Huizhou) Corporation Ltd. in Guangdong, China serves as the production location of Zama Group. Approximately 1,600 associates produce electronic fuel injection systems, carburetors, oil pumps, solenoid-valves and other parts for the outdoor industry. Zama Japan is the center of Research and Development,[13] design of in-house production tooling, as well as support for Japanese domestic customers. Zama Philippines, the newest Zama plant, is producing carburetors[10] and miniaturized coils for solenoid valves. USA Zama, Inc, located in Franklin, Tennessee serves as the Sales headquarters for the Zama Group and the world headquarters for Zama Aftermarket Sales.[4]


Zama Hong Kong
Zama China
Zama Japan
Zama Philippines
Zama USA
Locations of the Zama Group

Products and customers

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Zama offers about 350 different models of diaphragm carburetors[14] and is a major manufacturer of lubricating systems for chainsaws.[11] Other products Zama sells include electronic fuel injection systems, solenoid valves, output shafts, and complete solutions for fuel management as well as other customer-specific parts. Together with their partners, they offer complete engine management systems for small 2 and 4 cycle engines. OEM customers, such as Stihl, Husqvarna or Yamabiko, are mainly producers of lawn and garden products.[15]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Zama Group. "Zama History". Zama homepage. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  2. ^ a b Campos, Othel. "Germany's Zama bullish on PH". Manila Standard. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  3. ^ Konietzny, Benjamin. "Philippinische Wirtschaft auf dem Sprung". ntv. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  4. ^ a b Zama Group. "Zama Locations". Zama Homepage. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  5. ^ Adel, Rosette. "German firm opens $50-M plant in Batangas". Phil Star. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  6. ^ Zama Group. "Zama - About us". Zama homepage. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  7. ^ Abele, Corinne. "Im Interview- Zwei deutsche Führungskräfte äußern sich zu Standort- und Zukunftsplänen". Germany Trade and Invest. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  8. ^ Rempis, Jay. "Zama production plant opens in the Philippines". Manila Bulletin. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  9. ^ "Zama celebrates opening of Huizhou plant". Zama Homepage. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  10. ^ a b Lim, Janina. "German manufacturer opens P2.4-B facility". Business World Online Manila. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  11. ^ a b Zama Group. "Zama products". Zama homepage. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  12. ^ Andreas Stihl AG & Co. KG. "Homepage- About us". Stihl homepage. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  13. ^ Fiedler, Reinhard. "Auch Kaercher und Stihl sind betroffen". Backnanger Kreiszeitung. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  14. ^ The Standard. "German plant in Batangas to open in January". The Standard. Manila Standard. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  15. ^ Ersatzteilplan.de. "Zama Ersatzteilliste". Ersatzteilplan.de. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
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  • [1] Business Meeting of the Philippine President, Dr. Ruediger Stihl and Jan Grigor Schubert