Synprosyn

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Synthetic Products Syndicate
Native name
Mikamintuj Nada
Direct distributist syndicate
IndustryPlastics, petrochemical refining, industrial waste recycling
FoundedJanuary 7, 1910; 114 years ago (1910-01-07) in Maktarim, Talahara
Area served
Global
Key people
  • Tunambit Mikusan (Chairperson)
  • Amastan Gawuda (General ombudsperson)
  • Garmul Masuna (General foreperson)
Increase Ⲇ3.77 billion (2023)
($4.9 billion)
Total assetsIncrease Ⲇ26.4 billion (2023)
($34.28 billion)
Members31,900 (2022)
Websitesynprosyn.tal.com

Synthetic Products Syndicate DDS (Takelat: ⵎⵉⴽⴰⵎⵉⵏⵜⵓⵊ ⵏⴰⴷⴰ ⵎⴱⵏ; Mikamintuj Nada MBN), commonly known as SynProSyn (MiMiNa) is a Talaharan chemical producer based in the capital of Maktarim, with facilities across the country and several facilities across the world. Initially formed by a group of researchers from the National Petroleum Syndicate's research division, SynProSyn was established as a direct distributist syndicate as a result of market share negotiations in 1910, initially just manufacturing Talarite, one of the world's first synthetic plastics.

In addition to being one of the single largest syndicates in Talahara based on its assets and revenues, it is one of the largest chemical producers in the world, having also expanded into several niche ancillary sectors including chemical and industrial waste recycling. Politically, SynProSyn wields significant influence as one of the core stakeholders in the Eco-Future Industrial Group, an industrial salon with six seats on the Supreme Legislative Council and one representative at the Executive Council.

History

In the latter decades of the 19th century, Talahara's National Petroleum Syndicate (NPS) was rapidly expanding following the discovery of large oil reserves in the southwestern region of Amara. As many of the reserves were equally accessible from the Timna Strip region of Yisrael, Talaharan operations were hardpressed to exploit the reserves as quickly as possible. While this pressure would be alleviated by the 1919 annexation of the Timna Strip, Talaharan extraction rapidly accelerated for several decades. This policy quickly led to extraction greatly exceeding domestic demand and in addition to creating a reserve, the NPS expanded its efforts in researching uses for petrochemicals.

The NPS laboratories began producing medical products such as phenol and formaldehyde from petroleum hydrocarbons. By 1907, a trio of scientists, Tabat Sekerdid, Mastyes Jawara, and Yabdas Ortayas, were attempting to find ways to reinforce natural materials with synthetic resins produced with the same equipment that synthesized phenol and formaldehyde. The result of these experiments was ultimately the creation of "Talarite", named after Talahara, a thermosetting synthetic polymer. The cured material was sensitive to moisture and brittle in cold temperatures, but in the hot and arid country, these flaws were of lesser consequence and the broad applications of the product were quickly apparent.

The production of Talarite by the NPS on a broader scale drew the ire of several other syndicates within the United Communes. Several industries that relied on imported natural resins such as shellac for the production of adhesives, cosmetics, and gramophone records were concerned that the NPS was expanding beyond its mandate and could become too singularly dominant in Talahara's social market following its already meteoric rise in the petroleum industry. In late 1909, a market share risk case was filed in the Talaharan courts, which concluded in January 1910 with the severance of petrochemical refinement from NPS and the establishment of SynProSyn as a new syndicate.

Products

Finances

Facilities

Media and politics

Controversies

See also