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Dow Agrosciences (Dow Chemical Company)

Ingredients
公司描述

Dow AgroSciences (previously a subsidiary of Dow Chemical Company) was a global agricultural company that researched, developed, and marketed crop protection chemicals, seeds, and biotech solutions. 

Its product portfolio includes herbicides, insecticides, fungicides, and genetically modified seed technologies aimed at increasing crop yields and tackling pest and weed issues in agriculture.

The company was known for merging chemistry and biotechnology, and it served farmers, agribusinesses, and food producers all over the world. 

Dow AgroSciences was acquired by Corteva Agriscience in 2019 as part of the Dow-DuPont merger and accompanying restructuring.

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Product Types offered by this company
该公司新闻
Omega-9 Oils from Dow AgroSciences Remove 1 Billion Pounds of Bad Fats from Diet
五月 23, 2011
Omega-9 Oils from Dow AgroSciences Remove 1 Billion Pounds of Bad Fats from Diet
Omega-9 Oils from Dow AgroSciences have helped remove over 1 billion pounds of saturated and trans fats from the North American diet with beneficial economic and nutritional impact on the food industry.
From the archive
WUR to improve the quality of potato starch with DOW's EXZACT™ Precision Technology
九月 20, 2010
WUR to improve the quality of potato starch with DOW's EXZACT™ Precision Technology
Dow AgroSciences LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of The Dow Chemical Company (NYSE: DOW), and the Plant Sciences Group of Wageningen UR (University and Research center) have entered into a research agreement to improve the starch quality of potato
From the archive
FTC allows Dow to sell Morton Salt to K+S
九月 26, 2009
FTC allows Dow to sell Morton Salt to K+S
Dow Chemical Co., the largest U.S. chemical maker, won U.S. approval to sell its Morton Salt business to K+S AG for $1.68 billion.
From the archive
K + S agrees to buy Morton Salt from Dow Chemical
四月 03, 2009
K + S agrees to buy Morton Salt from Dow Chemical
K+S of Germany agreed Thursday to buy Morton Salt from Dow Chemical Co. for $1.68 billion to become the world's biggest salt producer and reduce its dependence on potash fertilizer.
From the archive