Melbourne-based packaging company Visy Industries Pty. Ltd. has opened its second Australian waste-to-energy plant and signaled plans for a US$306.7 million recycling project that could start in three ...
Australian packaging company Visy has teamed up with seafood producer Tassal to introduce new locally manufactured eco-friendly cardboard boxes for packaging prawns. This new packaging is set to ...
Australia's richest man, Anthony Pratt, will invest billions of dollars into his cardboard and recycling empire, which is expected to create 5,000 new jobs over the next decade. The money will go ...
The $3 billion Visy group, controlled by the Pratt family, spends more than $2bn each year on capital equipment, spare parts and other products, and is seeking to import more products from Asia to ...
The purchase appears to be an astute piece of business with the merger expected to add around $170 million to Visy's annual revenues. Zenexus supplies and distributes moving and storage boxes, major ...
Plaintiffs in the cardboard box price-fixing case against Amcor and Visy have been awarded $95 million in damages. More than 4,500 customers sued the packaging giants for fixing the price of cardboard ...
Visy, a glass manufacturer, has incorporated an average of 70% recycled glass into its production of bottles and jars. This accomplishment is claimed to be a first for the country. Annually, Visy ...
Over 400 Visy Board workers began an indefinite strike in Sydney and Melbourne on December 3 in response to the packaging company’s attempts to expand casual employment and undermine job security and ...
Visy has been making cardboard boxes for 72 years, but it has achieved revenue growth in August – in the middle of a pandemic – that would be the envy of most software start-ups. The manufacturing and ...
Visy Industries is one of the world's largest privately-owned paper, packaging, and recycling companies. Founded in Melbourne in the late 1940s, it would be easy to not think of Visy as a technology ...
WHAT cartel cronies Visy and Amcor did wrong was summarised in five sentences yesterday by Federal Court Judge Peter Heerey. "The cartel went on for almost five years," he said. "Had it not been ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results