ChemchinaChemChina is one of the top chemicals producers in China but "aims to be among the best in the world," said Ren Jianxin, president of China National Chemical Corp (ChemChina).

This year the company aims to increase its revenue by 22 percent to 139.5 billion yuan in 2010. It also plans to make profits of 3 billion yuan this year, up 173 percent from a year earlier, said Ren.

The company is already doing very well. It ranks second in the world for its production of methionine, and third for its production of organic silicon.

The company is currently expanding its Xinghuo organic silicon project in Jiangxi province, which is expected to be the world's largest production facility of the material.

Humble beginnings

Today ChemChina ranks 28th in China's top 500 enterprises, and it is 19th in the world's 100 leading chemical companies.

The company was started 26 years ago with loans of only 10,000 yuan. In 1984 Ren founded Bluestar Co to start his industrial cleaning business. Several years later Bluestar dominated China's industrial cleaning industry. In 1995 the company moved its headquarters from Lanzhou to Beijing, and one subsidiary, Bluestar Cleaning, was listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange.

Since that year Ren began to eye other businesses and in 1996 Bluestar merge with Xinghuo Chemical Co, a manufacturer of organic silicon. Following the purchase of Xinghuo, Bluestar made many other acquisitions on the domestic market and by 2002 the company's total assets increased to 4 billion yuan.

In 2004 Bluestar, together with China Haohua Chemical (Group) Corporation, and some other chemical companies formed ChemChina, the biggest chemical producer in the country.

"We are now focusing on the development of new materials and specialty chemical products," said Ren. "Improvement in technology will play a vital role in achieving this target."

Overseas expansion

ChemChina has made a series of overseas acquisitions in the past few years. In 2006 the company acquired French company Adisseo, a firm specializing in producing methionine, vitamins and biological enzymes. In the same year ChemChina bought another French company Rhodia's organic silicon business.

After the acquisitions the company boosted its production of methionine to number two in the world and organic silicon production to the top three.

In 2007 ChemChina signed an agreement with US private equity Blackstone Group, under which the US company will invest up to $600 million in ChemChina's subsidiary Bluestar for a 20 percent stake.

These acquisitions not only boosted some of ChemChina's business into those with global competency, but also improved the company's technologies a lot, said Ren.

With the acquisitions ChemChina has got many patents with its own intellectual property (IP). The company now ranks among the best in terms of numbers of IP among enterprises owned by China's central government.