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Škoda Works

The Škoda Works (Czech: Škodovy závody, Czech pronunciation: [ˈʃkoda] ) was one of the largest European industrial conglomerates of the 20th century, founded by Czech engineer Emil Škoda in 1859 in Plzeň, then in the Kingdom of Bohemia, Austrian Empire. It is the predecessor of today's Škoda Auto, Doosan Škoda Power and Škoda Transportation companies.

Škoda, a.s.
TypePrivate
IndustryConglomerates
FoundedPlzeň, Kingdom of Bohemia, Austrian Empire (1859 (1859))
FounderEmil Škoda
Defunct1999 (1999)
FateDivided
Successor
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Products
  • Locomotives,
  • aircraft,
  • ships,
  • machine tools,
  • steam turbines,
  • guns,
  • trolleybuses and trams
ParentReichswerke AG für Waffen-und Maschinenbau Hermann Göring 

History Edit

1859–1899: establishment of Škoda Edit

The noble Waldstein family founded the company in 1859 in Plzeň, and Emil Škoda bought it in 1869. It soon established itself as Austria-Hungary's leading arms manufacturer producing heavy guns for the navy, mountain guns or mortars along with the Škoda M1909 machine gun as one of its noted products. Besides producing arms for the Austro-Hungarian Army, Škoda has ever since also manufactured locomotives, aircraft, ships, machine tools, steam turbines and equipment for power utilities.

In 1859, Count Wallenstein-Vartenberk set up a branch of his foundry and engineering works in Plzeň. The output of the plant, employing over 100 workers, included machinery and equipment for sugar mills, breweries, mines, steam engines, boilers, iron bridge structures, and railway facilities. In 1869, the plant was taken over by Emil Škoda, an industrious engineer and dynamic entrepreneur.

Škoda soon expanded the firm, and in the 1880s, he founded what was then a very modern steelworks capable of delivering castings weighing dozens of tons. Steel castings and later forgings for larger passenger liners and warships went on to rank alongside the sugar mills as the top export branches of Škoda's factory.

1899–1945: before and during World War II Edit

 
Škoda 75 mm Model 15
 
Panzer 35(t) tank
 
Škoda supplied all the artillery weaponry for dreadnoughts of the Austro-Hungarian Navy Tegetthoff class

In 1899, the ever-expanding business was transformed into a joint-stock company, and before World War I, Škoda Works had become the largest arms manufacturer in Austria-Hungary. It was a navy and army contractor, mainly supplying heavy guns and ammunition.

Exports included castings, such as part of the piping for the Niagara Falls power plant and for the Suez Canal sluices as well as machinery for sugar mills in Turkey, breweries throughout Europe, and guns for the Far East and South America.

World War I brought a drop in the output of peacetime products. Huge sums were invested into expanding production capacities. By then, Škoda Works held majorities in a number of companies in the Czech lands and abroad that were not involved in arms manufacture. In 1917, the company had 35,000 employees in Plzeň alone.

Following the emergence of the Czechoslovak Republic in 1918, the complex economic conditions of postwar Europe caused the company to be transformed from what was exclusively an arms manufacturer into a multi-sector concern. In addition to traditional branches, the production programme embraced a number of new concepts, such as steam (and later electric) locomotives, freight and passenger vehicles, aircraft, ships, machine tools, steam turbines, power-engineering equipment, etc.

In 1923, the company's world-famous registered trademark, the winged arrow in a circle, was entered in the Companies Register. The deteriorating political situation in Europe saw arms production rise again in the mid-1930s.

Škoda manufactured the triple-barreled gun turrets for the Tegetthoff-class battleships of the Austro-Hungarian navy. Prior to World War II, Škoda produced LT-35 tanks, which are better known under their German designation, Panzer 35(t). They were originally produced for the Czechoslovak Army and were used extensively by the Wehrmacht in the Polish campaign, the Fall of France and the German invasion of the Soviet Union. In July 1944, Škoda started production of the Jagdpanzer 38(t).

In 1924, Škoda Works acquired the Laurin & Klement car manufacturer, later known as Škoda Auto. The companies were separated after 1945, when all of the Czechoslovak economy was nationalised.

Mountain guns produced by Škoda
Other weapons produced by Škoda

1945–1989: after World War II Edit

 
ES499.1 locomotive
 
Škoda, Lenin Works Pilsen (People's Enterprise) in Russian Cyrillic
 
Škoda 14Tr trolleybus in Vilnius

In 1945, the year that nationalisation efforts began in Czechoslovakia, Škoda was nationalised, and many sections were split from the company. The car works in Mladá Boleslav became Automobilové závody, národní podnik, AZNP, today's Škoda Auto, and the aircraft plant in Prague and truck plant became part of a conglomerate of nine truck producers headquartered in Liberec as LIAZ (Liberecké automobilové závody), although the trucks were still marketed as Škodas.[1] Some factories in Slovakia were also split off, and other plants produced food-industry equipment.

The company was renamed Závody Vladimíra Iljiče Lenina (Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Works) in 1953, but since the new name caused losses of sales abroad, the name was changed back to Škoda in 1965.[2]

The factory concentrated on markets in the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc. The company produced a wide range of heavy machinery such as nuclear reactors and locomotives. A lack of updates to its product designs and infrastructure considerably weakened the company's competitive position and its brand.

After 1962, Škoda became well known in the Soviet Union and other countries as a trolley bus manufacturer after it began to export Škoda 9 Tr, one of its most successful models. The successor, Škoda 14 Tr, manufactured between 1982 and 1997, is still widely used, for example, in post-Soviet states.

In 1978, the company was turned into the government-owned group of companies ("koncern") Škoda. It was based in Plzeň and consisted of the companies: První brněnská strojírna (First Machine Works of Brno), ČKD Blansko, ČKD Dukla Praha-Karlín in Prague, Slovenské energetické strojárne S. M. Kirova (Slovak S. M. Kirov Energy Machine Works) in Tlmače, and Výzkumný ústav energetických zařízení (Energy Facilities Research Institute) in Brno.

1989–2011: after fall of communism Edit

 
Hall of transportation section, parts of tram Škoda 14 T on left, modernized metro wagon 81-71 on right
 
Low floor tram Škoda 15 T in Prague

After the Communist Party lost power in late 1989, the company was privatized into the hands of management. Mismanagement and asset stripping led to a collapse. The company was restructured and some factories closed. Except for some smaller companies named Škoda and Škoda Auto, after the chaotic 1990s period, the Czech Škoda companies were again regrouped within the holding company Škoda Holding a.s. in 2000. In 2010, the holding company changed its name to Škoda Investment, a.s..

Following the change in the political climate in 1989, Škoda started along a path of privatisation and used the time to come up with an optimal production programme, make new business contacts and look for markets other than those that had so far been its priority markets, communist countries.

In 1991, a foreign partner for the passenger car works Škoda Auto a.s. was sought by the Czech government. Volkswagen was chosen, and the German firm initially took a 30% stake, rising to 100% ownership by 1999. Škoda Auto is now a completely-independent entity from other companies bearing the Škoda name.

In 1992, the company was privatised by the so-called Czech method. It began expanding its production activities, acquiring the Tatra and LIAZ vehicle works and constructing a plant to produce aluminum soft drink cans. The expansion put the company's financial stability in jeopardy. In 1999, it concluded an agreement with creditor banks, and the restructuring of the entire capital structure of the Škoda group was undertaken. The result was the legal and financial stability at the company. Currently, a sectoral restructuring of production companies in the group is under way. In April 2000, Škoda Holding a.s. took over the helm, controlling nineteen primary subsidiaries and most product lines.

In 2003, the Czech government sold its 49% stake to the Appian Group for 350 million CZK;[3](in 2020, equivalent to 14,78 million USD) later that year the Appian Group acquired the rest of its stake in a liquidation of the previous owner.[4] The Appian Group is a holding company incorporated in the Netherlands and controlled through a screen of shell companies. The real owner or owners are unknown, despite investigations by the Czech police.[5][6] In September 2010, a group of four current or former Škoda or Appian managers announced that it would acquire Škoda from Appian for an undisclosed price.[7][8] The Czech media speculated that the acquisition was only a formality, as the managers probably owned the parent company Appian.[8][9]

Škoda was then focused solely on the transport sector. Other divisions have been sold, a large part of them to the Russian company OMZ (the price was not published, estimated at 1 billion CZK).[10] Some smaller transport companies were acquired, such as part of the Hungarian company Ganz, VÚKV (owner of the Velim railway test circuit) and some transport-related assets of the former ČKD, now called Škoda Vagonka. In 2009, Škoda holding announced that the South Korean conglomerate Doosan would acquire its power section for 11,5 billion CZK (US$656 million).[10][11] Finally, in March 2011, Škoda sold its Škoda Transportation subsidiary to Cyprus-based company Škoda Industry (Europe) Ltd,[12] later renamed CEIL (Central Europe Industries) Ltd.

As of 2012, Škoda Investment still owns the Škoda brand and some real estate but does not perform any industrial activity. Between 2007 and 2012, the company paid dividends to Appian, a sum of 32 billion CZK (1.18 billion euro or US$1.6 billion).[13]

Škoda products Edit

 
Electric multiple unit ČD Class 471, commonly known as CityElefant, operated by České dráhy

Škoda Transportation produces various types of trolleybuses, tramcars, locomotives and rapid transit train systems.[citation needed] More can be found at: List of Škoda Transportation products.

Former subsidiaries Edit

  • Power division sold to Doosan produces as Doosan Škoda Power (former Škoda Power) steam turbines, heat exchangers and condensers
  • Metallurgy division held by United Group produces as Pilsen Steel (former Škoda, Hutě, Plzeň) crankshafts, turbine components or ingots
  • Nuclear division sold to OMZ produces as Škoda JS equipment for nuclear plants or oil refining, petrochemical and gas industry
  • Transportation division produces as Škoda Transportation trolleybuses, tramcars, electric locomotives, electric multiple units and rapid transit train systems.
  • Škoda Praha sold to ČEZ Group is supplier of power generation projects and their technological parts.
  • Former Škoda Vyzkum research institute now operating as VZÚ Plzeň
  • TS Plzeň a.s. (former Škoda TS) is active in heavy engineering, doing curing presses, hydraulic presses, equipment for rolling-mill plants and equipment for sugar-cane refineries.
  • Brush SEM, owned by UK based FKI, manufactures generators.
  • Pilsen Tools s.r.o. and Škoda Machine Tool a.s. are active in the machine tool sector.
  • Czech Precision Forge a.s. does open- die and closed-die forging of steel and non-ferrous alloys.
  • MKV Ozubená kola s.r.o. and Wikov Gear s.r.o. produce gearboxes and gear wheels.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Schauen, Till (December 2015). "Bau-genossen" [The joys of cooperative building]. Last & Kraft (in German). Vol. 24, no. 1 (December/Januar 2016). Mainz, Germany: Vereinigte Fachverlage. pp. 62–63. ISSN 1613-1606.
  2. ^ [Extract from the Register of Trademarks, file 8440, entry no. 111109] (in Czech). Prague, Czech Republic: Úřad průmyslového vlastnictví [Office of Industrial Property]. Archived from the original on 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2017-08-15. 2014-01-07 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Vláda schválila prodej Škody Holding americké Appian Machinery".
  4. ^ "Rozhodnutí OF/S264/02-215/03". Compet.cz. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
  5. ^ all: Economia, a.s. (30 July 2009). "Janoušek - stopa, které se mnozí bojí". Hn.ihned.cz. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
  6. ^ "Police amass damning evidence over Škoda Plzeň sale, no prosecutions likely: report". Radio Prague International. 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2020-06-18.
  7. ^ lidovky.cz (2010-09-20). "lidovky.cz: Velké tajemství českého byznysu odhaleno: plzeňská Škoda odkryla majitele". Byznys.lidovky.cz. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
  8. ^ a b "ihned.cz: Plzeňskou Škodu koupili čtyři manažeři. Appian v pozadí ale dál zůstává v mlze". Ekonomika.ihned.cz. 2010-09-21. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
  9. ^ "Krsek, Korecký, Čmejla a Diviš koupili firmu, která byla už dávno jejich". motejlek.com. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
  10. ^ a b "Jihokorejský Doosan smí převzít Škodu Power". Magazin.ceskenoviny.cz. 2012-10-22. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
  11. ^ Park, Kyunghee (2009-09-14). "Doosan Buys Škoda Power, its Biggest Purchase Abroad (Update1)". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-10-16. Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  13. ^ "Ze Škody odteklo 32 miliard. Neznámo kam". Lidové noviny. 2 February 2012.

Further reading Edit

  • Grant, Jonathan A. (2018). Between Depression and Disarmament: The International Armaments Business, 1919–1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-42835-4. OCLC 1010995486. Online review. Focus on munitions production in the interwar period.

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • History of Škoda in photos: , , (photo descriptions in Czech)
  • List of existing steam locomotives built by Skoda
  • Documents and clippings about Škoda Works in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

Škoda, works, this, article, about, former, parent, company, present, automobile, manufacturer, Škoda, auto, rail, vehicle, manufacturer, Škoda, transportation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, ad. This article is about the former parent company For the present day automobile manufacturer see Skoda Auto For the rail vehicle manufacturer see Skoda Transportation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Skoda Works news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Skoda Works Czech Skodovy zavody Czech pronunciation ˈʃkoda was one of the largest European industrial conglomerates of the 20th century founded by Czech engineer Emil Skoda in 1859 in Plzen then in the Kingdom of Bohemia Austrian Empire It is the predecessor of today s Skoda Auto Doosan Skoda Power and Skoda Transportation companies Skoda a s TypePrivateIndustryConglomeratesFoundedPlzen Kingdom of Bohemia Austrian Empire 1859 1859 FounderEmil SkodaDefunct1999 1999 FateDividedSuccessorDoosan Skoda PowerLIAZPilsen SteelSkoda AutoSkoda JSSkoda TransportationHeadquartersPlzen Czech RepublicArea servedWorldwideProductsLocomotives aircraft ships machine tools steam turbines guns trolleybuses and tramsParentReichswerke AG fur Waffen und Maschinenbau Hermann Goring Contents 1 History 1 1 1859 1899 establishment of Skoda 1 2 1899 1945 before and during World War II 1 3 1945 1989 after World War II 1 4 1989 2011 after fall of communism 2 Skoda products 3 Former subsidiaries 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory Edit1859 1899 establishment of Skoda Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The noble Waldstein family founded the company in 1859 in Plzen and Emil Skoda bought it in 1869 It soon established itself as Austria Hungary s leading arms manufacturer producing heavy guns for the navy mountain guns or mortars along with the Skoda M1909 machine gun as one of its noted products Besides producing arms for the Austro Hungarian Army Skoda has ever since also manufactured locomotives aircraft ships machine tools steam turbines and equipment for power utilities In 1859 Count Wallenstein Vartenberk set up a branch of his foundry and engineering works in Plzen The output of the plant employing over 100 workers included machinery and equipment for sugar mills breweries mines steam engines boilers iron bridge structures and railway facilities In 1869 the plant was taken over by Emil Skoda an industrious engineer and dynamic entrepreneur Skoda soon expanded the firm and in the 1880s he founded what was then a very modern steelworks capable of delivering castings weighing dozens of tons Steel castings and later forgings for larger passenger liners and warships went on to rank alongside the sugar mills as the top export branches of Skoda s factory 1899 1945 before and during World War II Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Skoda 75 mm Model 15 nbsp Panzer 35 t tank nbsp Skoda supplied all the artillery weaponry for dreadnoughts of the Austro Hungarian Navy Tegetthoff classIn 1899 the ever expanding business was transformed into a joint stock company and before World War I Skoda Works had become the largest arms manufacturer in Austria Hungary It was a navy and army contractor mainly supplying heavy guns and ammunition Exports included castings such as part of the piping for the Niagara Falls power plant and for the Suez Canal sluices as well as machinery for sugar mills in Turkey breweries throughout Europe and guns for the Far East and South America World War I brought a drop in the output of peacetime products Huge sums were invested into expanding production capacities By then Skoda Works held majorities in a number of companies in the Czech lands and abroad that were not involved in arms manufacture In 1917 the company had 35 000 employees in Plzen alone Following the emergence of the Czechoslovak Republic in 1918 the complex economic conditions of postwar Europe caused the company to be transformed from what was exclusively an arms manufacturer into a multi sector concern In addition to traditional branches the production programme embraced a number of new concepts such as steam and later electric locomotives freight and passenger vehicles aircraft ships machine tools steam turbines power engineering equipment etc In 1923 the company s world famous registered trademark the winged arrow in a circle was entered in the Companies Register The deteriorating political situation in Europe saw arms production rise again in the mid 1930s Skoda manufactured the triple barreled gun turrets for the Tegetthoff class battleships of the Austro Hungarian navy Prior to World War II Skoda produced LT 35 tanks which are better known under their German designation Panzer 35 t They were originally produced for the Czechoslovak Army and were used extensively by the Wehrmacht in the Polish campaign the Fall of France and the German invasion of the Soviet Union In July 1944 Skoda started production of the Jagdpanzer 38 t In 1924 Skoda Works acquired the Laurin amp Klement car manufacturer later known as Skoda Auto The companies were separated after 1945 when all of the Czechoslovak economy was nationalised Mountain guns produced by SkodaSkoda 75 mm Model 15 Skoda 75 mm Model 1928 Skoda 75 mm Model 1936 Skoda 75 mm Model 1939 Skoda 100 mm Model 1916 Skoda 100 mm Model 16 19 Skoda 105 mm Model 1939 Skoda 150 mm Model 1918Other weapons produced by SkodaSkoda M1909 machine gun 3 7cm KPUV vz 34 anti tank gun 3 7cm KPUV vz 37 anti tank gun 3 7cm UV vz 38 A7 used on LT vz 38 light tank Skoda 47mm SFK L 33 H Skoda 47mm SFK L 44 S Skoda 7 cm K10 Skoda 7 5 cm d 29 Model 1911 Skoda 76 5 mm L 50 Skoda 10 cm K10 Skoda 10 cm vz 38 howitzer 85 mm vz 52 Skoda 10 cm vz 53 Skoda 14 cm 56 Skoda 15 cm K10 Skoda 149 mm K series Skoda 149 mm K1 Model 1933 Skoda 149 mm K4 Model 1937 Skoda 19 cm vz 1904 21 cm Kanone 39 210 mm gun M1939 Br 17 24 cm Haubitze 39 Skoda 24 cm L 40 K97 Skoda 305 mm Model 1911 Skoda 30 5 cm 45 K10 305 mm howitzer M1939 Br 18 42 cm Haubitze M 14 161945 1989 after World War II Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Skoda Works news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp ES499 1 locomotive nbsp Skoda Lenin Works Pilsen People s Enterprise in Russian Cyrillic nbsp Skoda 14Tr trolleybus in VilniusIn 1945 the year that nationalisation efforts began in Czechoslovakia Skoda was nationalised and many sections were split from the company The car works in Mlada Boleslav became Automobilove zavody narodni podnik AZNP today s Skoda Auto and the aircraft plant in Prague and truck plant became part of a conglomerate of nine truck producers headquartered in Liberec as LIAZ Liberecke automobilove zavody although the trucks were still marketed as Skodas 1 Some factories in Slovakia were also split off and other plants produced food industry equipment The company was renamed Zavody Vladimira Iljice Lenina Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Works in 1953 but since the new name caused losses of sales abroad the name was changed back to Skoda in 1965 2 The factory concentrated on markets in the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc The company produced a wide range of heavy machinery such as nuclear reactors and locomotives A lack of updates to its product designs and infrastructure considerably weakened the company s competitive position and its brand After 1962 Skoda became well known in the Soviet Union and other countries as a trolley bus manufacturer after it began to export Skoda 9 Tr one of its most successful models The successor Skoda 14 Tr manufactured between 1982 and 1997 is still widely used for example in post Soviet states In 1978 the company was turned into the government owned group of companies koncern Skoda It was based in Plzen and consisted of the companies Prvni brnenska strojirna First Machine Works of Brno CKD Blansko CKD Dukla Praha Karlin in Prague Slovenske energeticke strojarne S M Kirova Slovak S M Kirov Energy Machine Works in Tlmace and Vyzkumny ustav energetickych zarizeni Energy Facilities Research Institute in Brno 1989 2011 after fall of communism Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Skoda Works news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Hall of transportation section parts of tram Skoda 14 T on left modernized metro wagon 81 71 on right nbsp Low floor tram Skoda 15 T in PragueAfter the Communist Party lost power in late 1989 the company was privatized into the hands of management Mismanagement and asset stripping led to a collapse The company was restructured and some factories closed Except for some smaller companies named Skoda and Skoda Auto after the chaotic 1990s period the Czech Skoda companies were again regrouped within the holding company Skoda Holding a s in 2000 In 2010 the holding company changed its name to Skoda Investment a s Following the change in the political climate in 1989 Skoda started along a path of privatisation and used the time to come up with an optimal production programme make new business contacts and look for markets other than those that had so far been its priority markets communist countries In 1991 a foreign partner for the passenger car works Skoda Auto a s was sought by the Czech government Volkswagen was chosen and the German firm initially took a 30 stake rising to 100 ownership by 1999 Skoda Auto is now a completely independent entity from other companies bearing the Skoda name In 1992 the company was privatised by the so called Czech method It began expanding its production activities acquiring the Tatra and LIAZ vehicle works and constructing a plant to produce aluminum soft drink cans The expansion put the company s financial stability in jeopardy In 1999 it concluded an agreement with creditor banks and the restructuring of the entire capital structure of the Skoda group was undertaken The result was the legal and financial stability at the company Currently a sectoral restructuring of production companies in the group is under way In April 2000 Skoda Holding a s took over the helm controlling nineteen primary subsidiaries and most product lines In 2003 the Czech government sold its 49 stake to the Appian Group for 350 million CZK 3 in 2020 equivalent to 14 78 million USD later that year the Appian Group acquired the rest of its stake in a liquidation of the previous owner 4 The Appian Group is a holding company incorporated in the Netherlands and controlled through a screen of shell companies The real owner or owners are unknown despite investigations by the Czech police 5 6 In September 2010 a group of four current or former Skoda or Appian managers announced that it would acquire Skoda from Appian for an undisclosed price 7 8 The Czech media speculated that the acquisition was only a formality as the managers probably owned the parent company Appian 8 9 Skoda was then focused solely on the transport sector Other divisions have been sold a large part of them to the Russian company OMZ the price was not published estimated at 1 billion CZK 10 Some smaller transport companies were acquired such as part of the Hungarian company Ganz VUKV owner of the Velim railway test circuit and some transport related assets of the former CKD now called Skoda Vagonka In 2009 Skoda holding announced that the South Korean conglomerate Doosan would acquire its power section for 11 5 billion CZK US 656 million 10 11 Finally in March 2011 Skoda sold its Skoda Transportation subsidiary to Cyprus based company Skoda Industry Europe Ltd 12 later renamed CEIL Central Europe Industries Ltd As of 2012 Skoda Investment still owns the Skoda brand and some real estate but does not perform any industrial activity Between 2007 and 2012 the company paid dividends to Appian a sum of 32 billion CZK 1 18 billion euro or US 1 6 billion 13 Skoda products Edit nbsp Electric multiple unit CD Class 471 commonly known as CityElefant operated by Ceske drahySkoda Transportation produces various types of trolleybuses tramcars locomotives and rapid transit train systems citation needed More can be found at List of Skoda Transportation products Former subsidiaries EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Power division sold to Doosan produces as Doosan Skoda Power former Skoda Power steam turbines heat exchangers and condensers Metallurgy division held by United Group produces as Pilsen Steel former Skoda Hute Plzen crankshafts turbine components or ingots Nuclear division sold to OMZ produces as Skoda JS equipment for nuclear plants or oil refining petrochemical and gas industry Transportation division produces as Skoda Transportation trolleybuses tramcars electric locomotives electric multiple units and rapid transit train systems Skoda Praha sold to CEZ Group is supplier of power generation projects and their technological parts Former Skoda Vyzkum research institute now operating as VZU Plzen TS Plzen a s former Skoda TS is active in heavy engineering doing curing presses hydraulic presses equipment for rolling mill plants and equipment for sugar cane refineries Brush SEM owned by UK based FKI manufactures generators Pilsen Tools s r o and Skoda Machine Tool a s are active in the machine tool sector Czech Precision Forge a s does open die and closed die forging of steel and non ferrous alloys MKV Ozubena kola s r o and Wikov Gear s r o produce gearboxes and gear wheels See also EditCategory Skoda locomotives Category Skoda trams Electric Transit Inc List of the largest artificial non nuclear explosionsReferences Edit Schauen Till December 2015 Bau genossen The joys of cooperative building Last amp Kraft in German Vol 24 no 1 December Januar 2016 Mainz Germany Vereinigte Fachverlage pp 62 63 ISSN 1613 1606 Vypis z rejstriku ochrannych znamek Extract from the Register of Trademarks file 8440 entry no 111109 in Czech Prague Czech Republic Urad prumysloveho vlastnictvi Office of Industrial Property Archived from the original on 2014 01 07 Retrieved 2017 08 15 Archived 2014 01 07 at the Wayback Machine Vlada schvalila prodej Skody Holding americke Appian Machinery Rozhodnuti OF S264 02 215 03 Compet cz Retrieved 2013 04 07 all Economia a s 30 July 2009 Janousek stopa ktere se mnozi boji Hn ihned cz Retrieved 2013 04 07 Police amass damning evidence over Skoda Plzen sale no prosecutions likely report Radio Prague International 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2020 06 18 lidovky cz 2010 09 20 lidovky cz Velke tajemstvi ceskeho byznysu odhaleno plzenska Skoda odkryla majitele Byznys lidovky cz Retrieved 2013 04 07 a b ihned cz Plzenskou Skodu koupili ctyri manazeri Appian v pozadi ale dal zustava v mlze Ekonomika ihned cz 2010 09 21 Retrieved 2013 04 07 Krsek Korecky Cmejla a Divis koupili firmu ktera byla uz davno jejich motejlek com Retrieved 2013 04 07 a b Jihokorejsky Doosan smi prevzit Skodu Power Magazin ceskenoviny cz 2012 10 22 Retrieved 2013 04 07 Park Kyunghee 2009 09 14 Doosan Buys Skoda Power its Biggest Purchase Abroad Update1 Bloomberg Retrieved 2013 04 07 E15 Skoda Industry muze prevzit Skodu Transportation Archived from the original on 2013 10 16 Retrieved 2014 03 08 Ze Skody odteklo 32 miliard Neznamo kam Lidove noviny 2 February 2012 Further reading EditGrant Jonathan A 2018 Between Depression and Disarmament The International Armaments Business 1919 1939 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 42835 4 OCLC 1010995486 Online review Focus on munitions production in the interwar period External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Skoda Works Official website History of Skoda in photos part 1 part 2 part 3 photo descriptions in Czech List of existing steam locomotives built by Skoda History of Skoda from corporate website Documents and clippings about Skoda Works in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Skoda Works amp oldid 1175211706, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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