Historical picture of WACKER production site

2022

New Production Facility in India

In Panagarh, India, WACKER opened a production site for manufacturing silicone rubber and silicone rubber compounds for electromobility, medical engineering and electricity supply. The site is part of the Group’s new growth strategy. Some 100 new jobs will be created during the first expansion phase.

Aerial view of the production site in Panagarh in India

2022

Construction of the Technical Competence Center for mRNA Actives in Halle

WACKER became a partner of the German Government in its pandemic preparedness plan. This project aims to provide vaccines to the public more quickly in the future. To this end, WACKER built a production facility in Halle for vaccines based on messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA).

A symbolic ground-breaking ceremony launched the construction of the Technical Competence Center for mRNA actives in Halle. At the Weinberg Campus, four production lines were initiated for active ingredients based on mRNA, such as vaccines for coronavirus. Production capacity in Halle will more than triple. The number of employees will be more than doubled. WACKER is investing more than 100 million euros in these projects.

2021

Sustainable Development Goals

WACKER presented its new, ambitious sustainable development goals. Not only will WACKER select sustainable suppliers for its raw-material procurement, it will also make its consumption of energy and water even more efficient. WACKER continues to invest in expanding its portfolio of specialty products. These help our customers to market climate-friendly and resource-saving solutions. WACKER Sustainable Solutions manages the product portfolio in line with defined sustainability criteria. By 2030, WACKER’s entire portfolio is to meet these criteria and greenhouse gas emissions are to be halved, regardless of volume growth. The company intends to achieve net zero by 2045.

WACKER Mega City

2021

New Production Facility in China

WACKER acquired a 60-percent stake in SICO Performance Material Co.Ltd., a specialty silane manufacturer. Based in Jining, China, SICO is a leading producer of organofunctional silanes for high-performance adhesives, sealants, coatings and composite materials. This acquisition sees WACKER further expanding its portfolio of high-quality specialty products in Asia.

Jining production plant

2021

Expansion of Biopharma Operations

WACKER increased its influence in the biopharma market by acquiring Genopis Inc., a pharmaceutical contract manufacturer. Renamed Wacker Biotech US Inc. , it produces pDNA for innovative therapeutic agents, including nucleic acid-based gene therapies and vaccines.

Production of pDNA

2021

Changes on Executive Board

Dr. Christian Hartel Dr. Christian Hartel has been Wacker Chemie AG’s new president and CEO since May 2021, succeeding Dr. Rudolf Staudigl, who retired at the end of the Annual Shareholders’ Meeting. Angela Wörl was appointed to the Executive Board as personnel director.

2020

Coronavirus Pandemic
WACKER plays its part in the fight against coronavirus and donated some 11,000 liters of isopropyl alcohol to make 15,000 liters of disinfectants for Bavarian hospitals and care facilities.

Charitable institutions were especially hard hit by the pandemic. WACKER’s Executive Board decided to alleviate the situation with special donations. In December 2020, WACKER donated €200,000 in total. The children’s charity The Ark (in München-Moosach) and Munich’s SchlaU-Schule (which offers educational programs to young refugees) each received €50,000. €100,000 went to the WACKER Relief Fund for its partner schools in Nepal, Haiti and Kosgoda.


New Production Plants
WACKER invested in its production facilities for biologics, LMPs (live microbial products) and vaccines at its Amsterdam site.

Wacker Chemie AG expanded its Chinese polymer activities by investing around US$100 million in building two new production plants at its Nanjing site. .

Person in protective clothing

2019

After a 20-month construction phase, Wacker Chemie AG starts up a new spray dryer for producing dispersible polymer powders in Ulsan, South Korea. The new facility is part of the site’s ongoing expansion to increase the company’s production capacity for dispersions and dispersible polymer powders in Asia.

Wacker Chemie AG intensifies its research into silicon-based materials for high-performance batteries, acquiring a stake in British battery specialist Nexeon Ltd. Powerful lithium-ion batteries are vital for applications in mobile devices, such as smartphones and tablets, and in electric vehicles.

WACKER’s site in Holla, Norway, starts up a new silicon-metal production plant. The output of the new furnace, one of the largest of its kind in the world, increases the Holla site’s total capacity by more than 40 percent, enabling it to cover about one-third of WACKER’s demand at its German sites.

Close-up of a button cell

2018

WACKER acquired a Dutch production plant from SynCo Bio Partners Luxembourg S.à r.l. This Amsterdam-based facility is now called Wacker Biotech B.V. and produces biopharmaceuticals, probiotics and vaccines.

WACKER BIOSOLUTIONS began producing fermentation-based cystine at its site in León, Spain. At the same time, the division expanded its Jena site to include biologics production facilities.

WACKER is the world’s first manufacturer capable of using renewable resources to produce commercial quantities not only of dispersions based on vinyl acetate-ethylene copolymer (VAE), but also of further VINNAPAS® brand products based on vinyl acetate.

2017

Sale of Majority Stake in Siltronic AG

This strategic approach marked a shift in focus: WACKER will now concentrate on its chemistry and polysilicon business.


Visit from German President

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier visited WACKER’s Nünchritz production site during his three-day tour of the Free State of Saxony. Accompanied by then Premier Stanislaw Tillich, he learned about WACKER’s role as an economic player in the region, as well as about technical recruiting, training, and maintaining a work-life balance.

VIP guests talking with the German president

2016

Largest Investment in the History of WACKER

In Charleston, Tennessee, USA, the new production site for polysilicon started operation. Construction took five years, with the investment costing approx. $2.5 billion. Expansion of polysilicon capacity that had grown steadily since the start of the solar boom at the turn of the century reached its peak.

World Premiere: First Industrial 3D Printer for Silicones

The process developed by four WACKER scientists is a milestone in additive manufacturing.

Image of the Charleston plant

2015

IPO of Siltronic AG and Company of the Year Award

The weekly publication ICIS Chemical Business named WACKER as its Company of the Year. IPO of Siltronic AG in the same year.

Top Siltronic management attending IPO at Frankfurt Stock Exchange

2014

One Hundred Years of WACKER

The company celebrated the day of its founding at an event in Munich with some 500 guests, including Bavaria’s then Premier, Horst Seehofer.

You can download the history "PEOPLE • MARKETS • CHEMISTRY - The Wacker Chemie Formula for Success 1914 – 2014" (PDF | 38.3 MB) here.

2013

2013 Marked Key Company Milestones

75 years of VINNAPAS® dispersions: this success was celebrated with an anniversary exhibition held in a modified freight container for 12 months, featuring many events on three continents – and online with a dedicated microsite – “75 years of VINNAPAS® dispersions.”

50 Years of silicone resin emulsion paints: The discovery of these water repellent, yet water-vapor-permeable paints was a truly pioneering achievement on the part of our researchers and developers. Today, SILRES® silicone resin emulsion paints set a standard in sustainable coating solutions.

Maritime container

2012

Opening of the Shanghai Center

Opening of the new company headquarters for the China region, including marketing, sales and administrative functions as well as R&D and applications laboratories.

Company HQ for the Greater China region

2010

New Production Sites

Backward integration down to metallurgical-grade crude silicon – WACKER acquired a site in Holla, near Trondheim in Norway. Silicon that’s 98.5% pure is produced from sand and coal at this site. The subsequent upgrading to hyperpure polycrystalline silicon with a purity level of 99.99999999% takes place at the WACKER POLYSILICON sites in Burghausen, Nünchritz and, since 2016, also in Charleston, USA.

WACKER and Dow Corning joined forces to launch the world’s largest silicones production site in Zhangjiagang, China.

A terrestrial globe

2009

Commissioning of Production Plant for Dispersible Polymer Powders in Nanjing

The Nanjing plant can produce 30,000 metric tons of polymer powders a year, and is the largest of its kind in China. WACKER is the sole supplier of polyvinyl-acetate-based polymer dispersions and dispersible polymer powders with production sites on all three key continents.

The Singapore plant

2008

Manufacture of Silicon Wafers in Singapore

In Singapore, Samsung and Siltronic’s joint facility started manufacturing 300 mm wafers from hyperpure silicon.

Silicon wafers

2006

IPO in Frankfurt

A new era began for the WACKER Group in April 2006. Wacker Chemie AG shares were traded on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange for the first time on April 10. The IPO saw WACKER placing 14.99 million shares with institutional and private investors. At €80, the issue price was set at the upper end of the price range. Advance demand was huge. The shares issued were over-subscribed more than 18 times. Since the IPO was held, the family shareholder continues to keep its majority stake in the company.


Knowledge management for customers, partners and new employees

Founding of the VINNAPAS® ACADEMY. This later became WACKER ACADEMY, which is currently operating at 15 sites across the globe, providing on-site knowledge transfer about handling WACKER products and their applications.

WACKER’s top management attends IPO in Frankfurt

2005

Founding of the WACKER Relief Fund

A charitable organization that provides aid for victims of natural disasters. The aim is to provide fast and unbureaucratic aid. The main focus is helping children by building or repairing schools or orphanages.

Fast, unbureaucratic aid

2004

Construction of Pilot Plant for Granular Polysilicon

These innovative little pellets are needed to manufacture silicon monocrystals. As they are easy to meter, they constitute a considerable improvement to the “poly chunks” used before. These serrated, irregular pieces had to be filled into the crucible by hand.

Granular polysilicon

1998

A New Site in Saxony, Eastern Germany

By purchasing a plant in Nünchritz, Saxony, WACKER acquired an important new site for silicones – and created ideal conditions for the production of innovative silicone products. Over the following decade, the site was gradually expanded. Today, it is one of the three WACKER sites worldwide that produce hyperpure polycrystalline silicon.

The Nünchritz plant

1992

WACKER SILICONE AWARD for the Fathers of Silicones

Richard Müller and Eugene Rochow were honored with the WACKER SILICONE AWARD. From 1942, independently of each other, both developed direct synthesis for dimethyldichlorosilane – the forerunner of WACKER’s over 3,000 different silane and silicone products.

Diagram of direct synthesis

1992

WACKER Moves to New Headquarters

Group HQ has been based in the Neuperlach district of Munich ever since.

The Group’s HQ building in Neuperlach
The Group’s HQ building in Neuperlach

1990

Production of Bioengineered Products Begins

The inauguration of the biotechnology research center for manufacturing compounds for the pharma, food and agricultural sectors heralds the age of biotechnology.

The following years saw this field blossom at new sites in Eddyville, Jena, Halle and Léon. In 2008, WACKER’s bioengineered L-cysteine won the BDI (Federation of German Industries) Environmental Award.

Bacterial culture in petridish

1987

Founding of DRAWIN Vertriebs-GmbH

In May 1987, DRAWIN Vertriebs-GmbH was founded as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Wacker Chemie AG. It took over some areas of WACKER SILICONES business division's logistics and distribution planning. DRAWIN’s product range now includes around 1,000 different silicone products supplied in over 100 countries worldwide. Its strengths are fast shipping, flexible combination of different types and quantities of products, and a wide, readily available product range.

1987

Silicone Scientists Honored

The first WACKER SILICONE AWARD was presented. To date, this prize ranks among the world’s most prestigious awards in organosilicon chemistry. It was first awarded to Prof. Peter Jutzi and Prof. Robert Auner.

1985

Expansion of the Biological Wastewater Treatment Plant in Burghausen

Designed for a capacity of up to 300,000 inhabitants, the plant now also treats wastewater from Burghausen and neighboring communities in Austria.

Biological wastewater treatment plant in Burghausen

1983

Entry into Asian markets

Founding of Wacker Chemicals East Asia Ltd., Tokyo, Japan. A counterpart in Singapore was established a year later.


WACKER silicon conquers space

Research in zero gravity: semiconductor experiments with silicon were conducted for WACKER and Chemitronic during the Spacelab mission.

Space shuttle

1980

WACKER Silicone Rubber Goes Liquid

Following the launch of WACKER’s first RTV (room-temperature-vulcanizing) and HTV (high-temperature-vulcanizing) grades on the market in the early 1950s and their constant enhancement, a new class emerged: LSR (liquid silicone rubber) products were introduced to the market.

Liquid silicone rubber

1978

The Birth of Siltronic

Wacker Siltronic Corporation was founded in Portland, Oregon, USA, for the manufacture and sales of semiconductor raw materials. The name Siltronic was used here for the first time.

Manufacturing semiconductor raw materials

1974

A Dedicated Environmental Protection Department Established at the Burghausen Plant

The new department comprising Emissions Control, Wastewater Management and Residual Waste Management initiated the construction of a biological wastewater treatment plant.

1972

Byproducts Become Bestsellers

HDK® was produced for the first time at the WACKER plant in Kempten. This pyrogenic silica was originally produced from the silanes that accumulated as byproducts of the Müller-Rochow synthesis (silanes and silicones) and the Siemens process (polycrystalline silicon). WACKER HDK® and its range of products are among the most successful WACKER products of all time. They are used in various applications such as silicone rubber, paints, coatings, laser toner, tooth paste and tomato ketchup.

The 1970s

Internationalization Begins

WACKER establishes new sales offices across Europe to bring its products closer to customers. Today, the company generates 80% of its sales outside Germany.

Production plant

1968/1969

Founding of Wacker Chemitronic Gesellschaft für Elektronik-Grundstoffe mbH

This later became Siltronic. Two new full-scale production plants with distillation columns more than 50 meters high went into operation manufacturing hyperpure polysilicon and distilling the starting product trichlorosilane.

The premises of Wacker Chemitronic Gesellschaft für Elektronik-Grundstoffe mbH

1968

Transition from the Coal Age to Petrochemicals

Opening of the new ethylene-based vinyl acetate monomer plant. Calcium carbide was no longer needed in Burghausen. The eight 50-meter carbide silos – Burghausen plant landmarks – were repurposed to store mainly metallurgical-grade silicon used to produce silicones and hyperpure silicon.

Exiting the coal age

1965

Successful Launch into the North American Market

Founding of Wacker Chemicals Corporation WCC in New York, USA. WCC acquired Monosilicon, a company based in Los Angeles, USA, where hyperpure silicon rods produced using the crucible pulling process were cut into slices or wafers, as they are more commonly known. The term “wafer” had not yet been coined.

Hyperpure silicon rods

1960

New Site, New Processes

At the new WACKER plant in Cologne, a facility based on the 2nd WACKER process was the first worldwide to start producing acetylaldehyde from ethylene on an industrial scale. This secured a cheap raw-material base for acetic acid and its derivatives in the VINNAPAS® range.

1957

New facilities and buildings were erected, including a 19-meter-high crude silane column and a tank farm for pure and intermediate products in Burghausen. In the decade between 1957 and 1967, annual sales generated from silicon-based plastics increased almost fivefold to 37.8 million deutschmarks.

2nd WACKER process WACKER basic research scientists set up the production of acetylaldehyde and acetic acid using a new base raw material. Instead of using expensive acetylene made from calcium carbide, cheap ethylene from the petrochemical industry could be used to manufacture these products. Known as the 2nd WACKER process, this pioneering synthesis has been included in textbooks and has been licensed all around the world.

 Crude silane column

Instant Coffee Inspires a Bestseller Product

While enjoying a cup of Nescafé, Dr. Max Ivanovits came up with the idea of developing a water-free dispersible polymer powder from water-based dispersions. Powder production began in 1958; gradually, these powders revolutionized the construction industry and made WACKER the world leader in this field.

1953

First Production of Hyperpure Silicon

Dr. Eduard Enk laid the foundation for WACKER’s semiconductor business. The first silicon rods were produced as early as 1955. Until 1961, several hyperpure silicon production plants went into operation.

Portrait of Dr. Eduard Enk

1947

Research Work into Silanes and Silicones Begins

Following his lecture on “Plastics Containing Silicon,” the young chemist Dr. Siegfried Nitzsche was hired on the spot. He later became the father of WACKER silicones. In 1949, Nitzsche and his colleagues successfully synthesized silane for the first time. Soon after, the first silane furnace was up and running.

Research

1945

Impending Closure

After the war ended, plant operations temporarily came to a halt as the Allies contemplated dismantling the company. The efforts of the WACKER management and workforce to prevent dismantlement were successful and the plant’s facilities gradually went back into operation. It was not until 1953 that the Allies relinquished control over WACKER as part of their “disentanglement” program, returning the company to its original owners.

Factory gate

1945

Resistance to Destruction of the Plant

In the final days of the war, accountant Jakob Scheipel, senior factory foreman Ludwig Schön and foreman Josef Stegmair were sentenced to death in a drum-head trial and shot in the factory yard because they had attempted to prevent the National Socialists from destroying the plant.

1944

“Foreign Workers” Replace Around a Third of the Core Workforce Called up for Military Service

A dark chapter for which WACKER takes responsibility: In 2000, WACKER became part of the “Foundation for Remembrance, Responsibility and the Future,” which made compensation payments to victims of forced labor and to foreign workers.

1939

The Outbreak of World War II

Following the outbreak of the second World War, nearly all WACKER operations were deemed important for the war effort. This meant that production of base chemicals such as acetylaldehyde, acetic acid and chlorinated solvents continued unabated. Especially important during this time was the manufacture of high-quality metal alloys such as ferrochrome or ferrosilicon at the then WACKER plants in Mückenberg and Tschechnitz.

1935

Patent Application for the Suspension Polymerization Process for PVC

Dr. Herbert Berg developed the process for manufacturing PVC. From 1935 until the business field was sold in 2000, WACKER PVC marketed under the VINNOL® brand turned into a growth engine that financed the development of modern production lines such as silicones and hyperpure silicon.

PVC products

1930

Start of VINNAPAS® Production

The managing director of the Consortium für elektrochemische Industrie, Willy O. Hermann, laid down the foundation for today’s WACKER POLYMERS business division back in the 1920s. Together with his team, he developed a process for producing vinyl acetate from ethylene and acetic acid on an industrial scale. In 1928, vinyl acetate went into production, followed two years later by polyvinyl acetate. Over the years, this would develop into the VINNAPAS® product line, ranging from adhesives in the wood industry to binders for construction applications, plastics, paper grades and woven fabric.

Tanker truck

1922

Production of Intermediate and End Products from Acetic Acid

A bestseller that was in production for almost 100 years. Acetic anhydride is used for the manufacture of pharmaceuticals and crease-resistant textile fibers. Production stopped in 1997.

People at work

Company Founder Alexander von Wacker, Recently Raised to the Non-Hereditary Aristocracy, Dies at the Age of 75

Born: May 29, 1846
Died: April 6, 1922

Company founder

1922

WACKER Shellac Made from Plastic

The first plastic made from acetylaldehyde produced in Burghausen contributed to the ever-increasing vogue of gramophone records at that time.

Man

1918 - 1922

Founding of Alzwerke GmbH, Construction and Commissioning of the Alz Canal

The 16-kilometer Alz Canal that joins the Alz and Salzach rivers is WACKER’s lifeline. The tamed hydropower of the Alz River generates cheap, sustainable electricity – to this day. The amount of electricity obtained per year is equivalent to the power consumed by a town with some 80,000 inhabitants.

1917

Start of Acetone Production

With 450 employees, the factory began producing acetone from acetic acid in Burghausen in the middle of the First World War. Suddenly acetone became important for the war effort: it was used to make synthetic rubber for sealing submarine batteries. This was the starting point on the trajectory to becoming an international chemical company.

Acetone production

1916

Construction of the Plant in Burghausen, Upper Bavaria

The first products manufactured in December 1916 were acetylaldehyde and acetic acid, which WACKER chemists developed by reacting acetylene (made from calcium carbide) with water. This entered the annals of the chemical industry as the 1st WACKER process for producing acetylaldehyde. These products were in the WACKER portfolio until 2012.

The Burghausen plant undergoing construction The Burghausen plant undergoing construction

October 13, 1914

Establishment of Dr. Alexander Wacker, Gesellschaft für elektrochemische Industrie, AG

Having trained as a cloth dealer and salesman, Alexander Wacker had by this time already earned a reputation as a successful businessman, and together with Sigmund Schuckert, he had made Elektrizitäts AG (EAG) in Nuremberg into a leading business in the electricity industry.

A visionary – even at the age of 68. His new business model: to build an industrial plant, covering applications ranging from electrochemicals through to organic chemistry.

Dr. Alexander Wacker