Entrance of KMML, Kollam
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Public Sector | |
Industry | Mining |
Founded | Kollam, India (1932) |
Founder | F. X. Perira |
Headquarters | Kollam(Quilon), India |
Key people
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K. K. Roy Kurian managing director Ajayakrishnan V general manager |
Products | Titanium dioxide, Titanium Sponge, Titanium Pigment |
Revenue |
₹ 6.13 billion US$100.80 million (2012) |
₹ 1.53 billion US$25.16 million |
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Number of employees
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2000 |
Website | kmml |
Kerala Minerals and Metals Ltd is an integrated titanium dioxide manufacturing public sector undertaking in Kollam, Kerala, India. Its operations comprise mining, mineral separation, synthetic rutile and pigment-production plants. Apart from producing rutile-grade titanium dioxide pigment for various types of industries, it also produces other products like ilmenite, rutile, zircon, sillimanite, synthetic rutile etc. It is one of the best performing Public Sector Units in India.
The company manufactures titanium dioxide through the chloride route. The different grades are produced by KMML under the brand name KEMOX.
KMML has always been responsive to social and environmental causes. Some of the initiatives taken by KMML have made a significant change to the area and its people.
The history of the beaches of Sankarmangalam and nearby areas is linked with the history of the KMML. In 1909 the German scientist Dr. Schomberg found traces of monazite in the sand flakes on the imported coir from Sankaramangalam. The rare earth minerals made the beach an area of scientific interest. The discovery process for this huge Indian deposit was accidentally initiated in the year 1908 when Herr Schomberg, a German chemist, identified the presence of monazite in the sand remnants of contaminants of coir imported from Kerala. Encouraged by the great demand in those days for thorium oxide in gas mantle, Schomberg established the first plant at Manavalakurichi (MK) in 1910 for separation of monazite and later another plant at Chavara. Subsequent to the arrest of Schomberg on charges of being a German spy during the First World War, both his plants at Manavalakurichi and Chavara were closed down.
The London Cosmopolitan Mineral Company established in the year 1914 in London took over these plants and continued operations. In 1920, Hopkins and Williams (H & W), yet another London based English Company started operation at MK and Chavara. The first export of ilmenite from Chavara took place in the year 1922 and the Indian ilmenite maintained a virtual monopoly in the world market as basic raw material for titania pigment (white) till 1940 when four plants belonging to Travancore Minerals Ltd (TMC), Hopkins & William Travancore Ltd (H&W) and Fx Pereira & Sons (FXP) together exported as high as three hundred thousand tons of ilmenite from Chavara.