Bakkafrost

Bakkafrost
Joint-stock company
Traded as OSE: BAKKA
Industry Food industry
Founded 1968
Founders Martin and Hans Jacobsen
Headquarters Glyvrar, Faroe Islands
Key people
Regin Jacobsen (CEO), Rúni M Hansen (Chairman of the board)
Products Salmon
Revenue 2.7 billion DKK (2014)[1]
899 million DKK (2014)[1]
Profit 647 million DKK (2014)[1]
Owner Oddvør Jacobsen (9.50%) Regin Jacobsen (9.30%) and around 3050 others from 22 countries[2]
Number of employees
1000 (2014)[1]
Website bakkafrost.com
Bakkafrost is the main sponsor of the Faroe Islands national football team. On this photo is the captain of the team, Fróði Benjaminsen, with the Bakkafrost-logo.

Bakkafrost (OSE: BAKKA) is a Faroese salmon farming company based in Glyvrar on the island Eysturoy in the Faroe Islands. Bakkafrost is the largest fish farming company in the Faroe Islands and one of the biggest private employer in the islands, if not the biggest.[3] Bakkafrost is the eighth largest fish farming companies in the world.[4]

Regin Jacobsen and his mother Oddvør Jacobsen are the main owners of Bakkafrost, Oddvør Jacobsen owns 9,5% of the shares and Regin Jacobsen ownes 9,3% of the shares. There are currently more than 3000 different owners from 22 countries.[2]

History

Bakkafrost was established in 1968 by the two brothers Martin and Hans Jacobsen, also named "á Bakka" instead of Jacobsen, which refers to the place name Á Bakka, where they come from. The current CEO since 1989 is Regin Jacobsen, also known in the Faroe Islands as Regin á Bakka, he is the son of Hans Jacobsen (Hans á Bakka). The first ten years they worked with herring, but in 1979 they started to work with salmon farming.[5]

In 2009 Bakkafrost produced 30.650 ton gutted weight. They had 14 licenses in 13 fjords in the Faroe Islands and owned 44% af all fish farming licenses in the Faroe Islands, mainly in the central and northeastern part of the islands. Bakkafrost has salmon slaughterhouses in Klaksvík and Kollafjørður, through the company Faroe Farming, of which they own almost 50%, they also have a slaughterhouse in the southernmost island Suðuroy in the village Vágur. Bakkafrost also owns a further processing factory in Glyvrar.

A few months before Bakkafrost was registered on the Oslo Stock Exchange the company merged with another Faroese company, Vestlax, which was also a salmon farming company.

On 26 March 2010 the company was registered on Oslo Stock Exchange.[6]

In April 2011 Bakkafrost bought the Faroese company Havsbrún for 1,1 billion Danish kroner. After this Bakkafrost could control the whole chain of production from the salmon feed, to the further processing of the salmon. In 2010, before the Havsbrún was merged with Bakkafrost, Havsbrún's turnover was 823 million Danish kroner, and the operating profit was 238 million Danish kroner. Havsbrún at that time also owned 33,3% of Hanstholm Fiskemelsfabrik AS in Denmark along with 78,1% of the shares in the salmon farming companies Faroe Farming and Viking Seafood.[7]

In September 2014 Bakkafrost was worth 6.1 billion Danish kroner. At the same time Regin Jacobsen and his mother Oddvør Jacobsen became the first billionair-family in the Faroe Islands, when their Bakkafrost-shares of 9,2% and 9,4% were worth 1.1 billion Danish kroner.[8]

In 2014 Bakkafrost sold 44,013 tons of salmon, and the same year the company had a profit of 899 million Danish kroner before taxes, the company paid 255 million in taxes, so after taxes the profit was kr 647 million.[9]

In March 2015 Gøtuvík (the bay of Gøta) became the first fish farm in the Faroe Islands to carry ASC certification, which is an internationally recognized standard backed by the WWF.[10]

On 28 May 2015 Bakkafrost shares were sold for 206 Norwegian kroner. On the same day the worth of Bakkafrost grew to kr.10 billion, a record high.[11]

Honours

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Sørensen, Bent Højgaard (24 February 2015). "Færøsk laksegigant sætter ny rekord" (in Danish). Berlingske Business. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  2. 1 2 Reyðberg, Eyðfinn (24 February 2015). "Hesi eiga Bakkafrost – meira enn 3.000 partaeigarar" (in Faroese). Vinnuvitan. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  3. "Bakkafrost Chief Financial Officer quits". Fishupdate.com. 7 October 2014. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  4. portal.fo - Føroysk alifyritøka er áttinda størst í heiminum
  5. "Frister med lusefri lakseaksje". E24.no (in Norwegian). 9 March 2010. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  6. "Bakkafrost er klare til å gå på børs" (in Norwegian). Norsk Fiskeoppdrett. 16 February 2010. Archived from the original on 10 August 2014. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  7. Fish.fo - Bakkafrost kjøper Havsbrún, published on 14 April 2011. Accessdate 9 February 2015.
  8. "Færøsk lakseeventyr skaber milliardærfamilie" (in Danish). Business.dk. 8 September 2014. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  9. in.fo - Bakkafrost metúrslit upp á 899 milliónir, written by Eirikur Lindenskov on 24 February 2015.
  10. "Bakkafrost fish farm ASC certified". Foreign Service of the Prime Minister's Office of the Faroe Islands. 26 March 2015. Archived from the original on 28 August 2015. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  11. Fiskur.fo, Tók enn ein varða: Bakkafrost hevur nú eitt virði uppá tíggju milliardir krónur.
  12. in.fo - Bakkadrost er ársins virki í ár
  13. "Stockman-prisen" (in Norwegian). finansanalytiker.no. 23 September 2015. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  14. Vinnuvitan.fo
  15. industry.fo - Ársins Virki skal veljast fyri ellintu ferð

External links

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