Campina (company) explained

Campina
Type:Private/Cooperative
Fate:Merged with Friesland Foods
Key People:Justinus Sanders (CEO)
Products:Milk, cheese, yogurt
Num Employees:7,099
Parent:FrieslandCampina
Revenue:€4 billion (2007)

Campina is a Dutch dairy cooperative. Main brands include Campina and Mona. In 2008, it merged with Royal Frieslands Foods. The name of the new company is FrieslandCampina.

The company history starts with many village cooperatives that gradually merged into each other and thus became big regional companies. Campina in its current form was created in 1989 by the merge of two of such regional cooperatives, Melkunie Holland and DMV Campina. After this merger the company was named Campina Melkunie until it dropped the Melkunie part in 2001.

In 2004, Campina and Arla, a Danish dairy cooperative, announced their plan to merge, http://www.foodanddrinkeurope.com/news/news-ng.asp?n=56676-campina-arla-to however this plan was disbanded in April 2005 for undisclosed reasons http://www.foodanddrinkeurope.com/news/ng.asp?n59564-arla-campina-disband although plans for other forms of cooperation would still be considered.

On 19 December 2007, Campina and Friesland Foods announced that the companies are exploring the possibility to merge. The EU approved the merger if the two cooperatives sell certain cheese and dairy drink divisions.[1]

Brands with Health Benefit Claims

Acquisitions

In Germany, now Campina GmbH

Notes and References

  1. News: DealBook . The New York Times . 9 February 2009.
  2. CMFocus 07-39 30 August 2007