Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company
Type | Public |
---|---|
Traded as |
|
Industry | Manufacturing |
Founded | August 29, 1898 (1898-08-29) Akron, Ohio, U.S. |
Founder | Frank Seiberling |
Headquarters | Akron, Ohio ,U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Richard J. Kramer(Chairman, President, and CEO) |
Products | Tires |
Revenue | US$15.377 billion (2017) |
Operating income | US$1.221 billion (2017) |
Net income | US$346 million (2017) |
Total assets | US$17.064 billion (2017) |
Total equity | US$4.603 billion (2017) |
Number of employees | ~64,000 (December 2017) |
Subsidiaries | List of subsidiaries |
Website | goodyear.com [65] |
Footnotes / references [1] |
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company is an American multinational tire manufacturing company founded in 1898 by Frank Seiberling and based in Akron, Ohio. Goodyear manufactures tires for automobiles, commercial trucks, light trucks, motorcycles, SUVs, race cars, airplanes, farm equipment and heavy earth-mover machinery. It also produced bicycle tires from its founding until 1976.[2] As of 2017, Goodyear is one of the top four tire manufacturers along with Bridgestone (Japan), Michelin (France) and Continental (Germany).[3]
The company was named after American Charles Goodyear, inventor of vulcanized rubber. The first Goodyear tires became popular because they were easily detachable and required little maintenance.
Goodyear is also known for the Goodyear Blimp. Though Goodyear had been manufacturing airships and balloons since the early 1900s, the first Goodyear advertising blimp flew in 1925. Today, it is one of the most recognizable advertising icons in America.[4] The company is the most successful tire supplier in Formula One history, with more starts, wins, and constructors' championships than any other tire supplier.[5] They pulled out of the sport after the 1998 season. It is the sole tire supplier for NASCAR series.
Goodyear is a former component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.[6] The company opened a new global headquarters building in Akron in 2013.
Type | Public |
---|---|
Traded as |
|
Industry | Manufacturing |
Founded | August 29, 1898 (1898-08-29) Akron, Ohio, U.S. |
Founder | Frank Seiberling |
Headquarters | Akron, Ohio ,U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Richard J. Kramer(Chairman, President, and CEO) |
Products | Tires |
Revenue | US$15.377 billion (2017) |
Operating income | US$1.221 billion (2017) |
Net income | US$346 million (2017) |
Total assets | US$17.064 billion (2017) |
Total equity | US$4.603 billion (2017) |
Number of employees | ~64,000 (December 2017) |
Subsidiaries | List of subsidiaries |
Website | goodyear.com [65] |
Footnotes / references [1] |
History
Early history 1898–1926
The first Goodyear factory opened in Akron, Ohio, in 1898. The thirteen original employees manufactured bicycle and carriage tires, rubber horseshoe pads, and poker chips. The company grew with the advent of the automobile.
In 1901, Frank Seiberling provided Henry Ford with racing tires. In 1903, Paul Weeks Litchfield was granted a patent for the first tubeless automobile tire. By 1908, Ford was outfitting his Model T with Goodyear tires. In 1909, Goodyear manufactured its first aircraft tire.[7]
In 1916, Litchfield found land in the Phoenix area suitable for growing long-staple cotton, needed for reinforcing rubber in tires. The 36,000 acres purchased were controlled by the Southwest Cotton Company, formed with Litchfield as president. (This included land that would develop into the towns of Goodyear and Litchfield Park.)
In 1924, Litchfield, as Goodyear Vice President, forged a joint venture with the German Luftschiffbau Zeppelin Company to form the Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation. In the late 1920s to 1940, the company worked with Goodyear to build two Zeppelins in the United States and the Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation was created to facilitate the relationship. The partnership continued even when Zeppelin was under Nazi control and only ended after World War II began.[8]
By 1926, Goodyear was the largest rubber company in the world. Only four years earlier it was forced to temporarily halt production of racing tires due to heavy competition. Nevertheless, the popularity of the Goodyear tire on the racing circuit led to a popular demand for the return of the brand.
Expansion 1926–1970
On August 5, 1927, Goodyear had its initial public offering and was listed on the New York Stock Exchange.[9]
By 1930, Goodyear had pioneered what would later become known as "tundra tires" for smaller aircraft — their so-called low inflation pressure "airwheel" aviation wheel-rim/tire sets were initially available in sizes up to 46 inches (117 cm) in diameter.[10]
For the next sixty years Goodyear grew to become a multinational corporation with multibillion-dollar earnings. It acquired their rival Kelly-Springfield Tire in 1935. During World War II Goodyear manufactured F4U Corsair fighter planes for the U.S. Military. Goodyear ranked 30th among United States corporations in the value of wartime production contracts.[11] WWII forced the dissolution of the Goodyear-Zeppelin partnership in December 1940. By 1956 they owned and operated a nuclear processing plant in Ohio.
In 1944, Goodyear created a subsidiary in Mexico in a joint venture with Compañía Hulera, S.A. de C.V., Compañía Hulera Goodyear-Oxo, S.A. de C.V. or Goodyear-Oxo.
Radial tire transition
Of the five biggest U.S. tire firms in 1970, today only Goodyear remains independent, due to the challenge posed by radial tire technology, and the varied responses.[12] At the time, the entire U.S. tire industry produced the older bias-ply technology. Estimates to fit the factories with a new set of machinery and tools for making this new product were between $600 million and $900 million. This was a substantial amount in a low margin business with sales revenue in the low billions.[13]
Sam Gibara, who headed Goodyear from 1996 to 2003, has noted that without the action of Pilliod, Goodyear "wouldn't be around today."[16]
Sales for 1969 topped $3 billion, five years later sales topped $5 billion and it boasted operations in thirty-four countries. In 1978, the original Akron plant was converted into a Technical Center for research and design. By 1985, worldwide sales exceeded $10 billion.
Goodyear Aerospace, a holding that developed from the Goodyear Aircraft Company after World War II designed a supercomputer for NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center in 1979, the MPP. The subsidiary was sold in 1987 to the Loral Corp. as a result of restructuring.
In 1987, Goodyear formed a business partnership with Canadian tire retailer Fountain Tire.[17]
Goldsmith affair 1986
In October 1986, Goodyear was a victim of a Greenmail attack. British financier James Goldsmith in conjunction with the investment group Hanson purchased 11.5% of Goodyear's outstanding common stock.[18] They threatened to take the company over. On November 20, 1986, Goodyear acquired all of the 12,549,400 shares of stock held by Goldsmith's group at an above-market price of $49.50 per share.[19] Goodyear also made a tender offer for up to 40 million shares of its stock from other shareholders at $50 per share. The tender offer resulted in Goodyear buying 40,435,764 shares of stock in February 1987.
As a result, Goodyear took a charge of $224.6 million associated with a massive restructuring plan. The company closed plants in Cumberland, Maryland; New Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and Windsor, Vermont. It sold its Goodyear Aerospace business to Loral Corporation for $588 million and its Motor Wheel business to MWC Inc. for $175 million. Two subsidiaries involved in agricultural products, real estate development, and a resort hotel in Arizona were sold for $220.1 million.
1990 to present
The last major restructuring of the company took place in 1991. Goodyear hired Stanley Gault, former CEO of Rubbermaid to expand the company into new markets. The moves resulted in 12,000 employees being laid off.
In 2005, Titan Tire purchased the farm tire business of Goodyear, and continues manufacturing Goodyear agricultural tires under license. This acquisition included the plant in Freeport, Illinois.[20]
On July 10, 2008, Goodyear was recognized as one of America's most respected companies by the Reputation Institute (RI) and Forbes magazine. Goodyear ranked 16th on the magazine's third annual listing of companies with the best reputations in the United States.[21]
The list is based on the results RI's Global Pulse consumer opinion survey, which measures the overall respect, trust, esteem, admiration and good feelings consumers hold toward the world's largest companies.[22]
Scores are based on RI's seven dimensions of reputation: products/services, innovation, workplace, citizenship, governance, leadership and performance. RI said the 2008 survey indicates that consumers are most influenced by a company's high-quality products and services as well as its governance and citizenship.
Goodyear's score of 76.0, represented a 7.54 point increase over 2007 and was the largest year-over-year improvement of any company on the list. Goodyear is the only tire company on the top-75 list.
The recognition from RI and Forbes is the fifth significant honor for Goodyear in 2008. The company was named the world's most admired company in the motor vehicle parts industry by Fortune magazine.[23] Audit Integrity Inc. and Forbes magazine ranked Goodyear sixth on their list of America's most trustworthy companies.[24] The Wall Street Journal recognized Goodyear for leading shareholder return for the past five years in the automotive category. Goodyear was also ranked among the Top 100 Corporate Citizens selected by CRO magazine.[25]
The company announced in summer 2009 that it will close its tire plant in the Philippines as part of a strategy to address uncompetitive manufacturing capacity globally by the end of the third quarter.[26]
Goodyear announced plans to sell the assets of its Latin American off-road tire business to Titan Tire for US$98.6 million, including the plant in Sao Paulo, Brazil and a licensing agreement that allows Titan to continue manufacturing under the Goodyear brand. This deal is similar to Titan's 2005 purchase of Goodyear's US farm tire assets.[27][28]
In 2011, more than 70 years after the dissolution of the Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation, it is announced that Goodyear will partner with Zeppelin again (the legacy company Zeppelin Luftschifftechnik) to build more zeppelins together.[29]
In 2018, Goodyear and Bridgestone announced the creation of TireHub, a joint wholesale distribution network across the United States.[30] At the same time, Goodyear also announced that it was ending its distribution relationship with American Tire Distributors, the largest tire wholesaler in the US.[31]
In 2018, Goodyear was ordered to pay $40.1 million to J. Walter Twidwell, who claimed he developed mesothelioma because of exposure to asbestos. After the trial, Goodyear asked the New York Supreme Court for a new trial. Goodyear attorney James Lynch said Goodyear did not receive proper consideration from the jury. Lynch said that the other side's attorneys engaged in character assassinations against expert witnesses. During closing remarks, the attorneys for Twidwell put up a slide with the heads of Goodyear's expert witnesses pasted onto "insulting caricatures."[32]
In December 2018, Goodyear ceased operations in Venezuela due a lack of materials and rising costs resulting from hyperinflation.[33]
Timeline
Source:[7]
1898: Goodyear founded
1899: Automobile tires added to the original product line of bicycle tires, carriage tires and horseshoe pads
1901: Seiberling makes racing tires for Henry Ford
1903: Paul Litchfield granted patent on first tubeless automobile tire (Litchfield would go on to become president of Goodyear-Zeppelin, then board chairman)
1908: Ford's Model T is outfitted with Goodyear tires
1909: First pneumatic aircraft tire
1911: First airship envelope
1912: Goodyear blimp first debuts
1917: Made airships and balloons for the U.S. military during World War I
1919: Tires on the winning car at the Indianapolis 500
1924: Zeppelin patents acquired, joint venture Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation formed with the German company
1925: Pilgrim is launched, the first commercial non-rigid airship to use helium
1926: World's largest rubber company, based on sales of $230,161,356
1927: Initial public offering[9]
1929: Construction of world's largest airship dock started in Akron
1929: Introduction of first-known example of low-pressure tundra tires for aviation, invented by Alvin J. Musselman as Goodyear "Airwheels"[34]
1935: Acquired Kelly-Springfield Tire
1937: First American-made synthetic rubber tire
1940: In December, Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation dissolved with WWII straining partnership[29]
1942: Awarded contract to build FG-series Corsair naval fighter planes
1944: Tire testing begins near San Angelo, Texas[7]
1947: First nylon tires developed
1949: First television advertising with sponsorship of "The Goodyear Review," hosted by Paul Whiteman
1954: First nationwide strike in company's history lasted 52 days
1956: Goodyear-operated U235 atomic processing plant opens in Ohio
1957: Goodyear Proving Grounds for tire testing, near San Angelo, Texas, is rebuilt[7]
1958: Production of foam-padded instrument panels begun for 1959 model cars
1962: Goodyear racing tires used on more winning stock and sports cars than any other brand
1963: Goodyear produces its one billionth tire
1965: Radial-ply tires made available in a full range of sizes to auto manufacturers
1967: Goodyear introduces the Polyglas tire, one of the first wide-tread bias-belted fiberglass tires, which along with similar tires from competitors such as the Firestone Wide-Oval would become regular equipment on 1970 to 1974 models, which would be superseded by radial tires beginning in 1975.
1969: Sales reach $3 billion
1970: First tires on the moon (Apollo 14)
1974: Sales reach $5 billion
1975: All tires used in Indianapolis 500 supplied by Goodyear
1976: Chemical Division shipped first shatterproof polyester resin bottles
1977: Industry's first all-season tire (Tiempo) introduced
1978: Akron plant converted into Technical Center for R&D
1983: Three billionth tire produced
1984: Worldwide sales exceed $10 billion
1986: James Goldsmith takeover attempt and resulting restructuring
1987: Completion of the California - Texas "All American" oil pipeline
1991: Aquatred tire introduced
1992: Began selling tires at Sears stores
1993: Opened first tire store in Beijing, China
1993: Inauguration of Dalian plant, China
1994: "electronic store" opened on CompuServe
1995: Worldwide sales exceed $13 billion
1995: Bought Polish Tire Company Dębica
1998: Sold the All American Pipeline and Celeron businesses
1999: Announced $1 billion global alliance with Japan's Sumitomo Rubber Industries, which had rights to the Dunlop tire brand in much of the world, to establish six joint ventures in North America, Europe and Japan
2000: Formed an Internet-based purchasing alliance with five other rubber companies called RubberNetwork.com
2003: Quarterly dividend to shareholders eliminated
2004: Assurance TripleTred and ComforTred tires introduced
2005: North American farm tire operations sold to Titan Tire Corporation
2006: Goodyear blimp made maiden voyage in China
2007: Engineered Products Division sold to Carlyle Group; EPD is renamed Veyance Technologies [66]
2008: Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary Association trust (VEBA) approved by U.S. District Court, funded with $1 billion
2009: Goodyear Assurance Fuel Max tire introduced in North America
2010: Plans announced to sell European and Latin American farm tire businesses
2011: After being dissolved during WWII, Goodyear and Zeppelin's legacy company partner again to build more airships together[29]
2013: New headquarters complex opens in Akron
2015: Goodyear and Sumitomo announced that they would dissolve their worldwide partnership.
2018: The company ranked 187th on the Fortune 500 list of the largest United States companies by revenue marking its 24th year on the list
Corporate structure and leadership
Board of directors
Former Board members include James C. Boland and Rodney O'Neal. Richard Kramer is the chief executive officer and president of the company (since 2010), succeeding Robert J. Keegan.
Subsidiaries
Dunlop Tyres (North America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand)
The Kelly Springfield Tire Company (United States) Douglas Tires
Fierce
Lee
Sava (Slovenia)
Fulda (Germany)
Dębica (Poland)
Wingfoot Commercial Tire Systems, LLC
Bluestreak (Indonesia)
Regetta (Australia) Distributed by KMART
LS2000 (Japan) Distributed by Goodyear Autocare
Goodyear Auto Service Centers
Goodyear Chemical
Just Tires
Controversies
Foreign Relations with Indonesia in the 1960s
Following the military coup in Indonesia in 1965, His Excellency Suharto encouraged Goodyear to return and offered rubber resources and political prisoners as labor. In an NBC special aired in 1967, reporter Ted Yates aired footage showing former Communist rubber union workers escorted at gunpoint to the rubber plantation.
Bad as things are in Indonesia, one positive fact is known. Indonesia has a fabulous potential wealth in natural resources and the New Order [the fascist regime headed by pro-U.S. General Suharto] wants it exploited. So they are returning the private properties expropriated by Sukarno's regime. Goodyear's Sumatran rubber empire is an example. It was seized [by the rubber workers] in retaliation for U.S. aggression in Vietnam in 1965. The rubber workers union was Communist-run, so after the coup many of them were killed or imprisoned. Some of the survivors, you see them here, still work the rubber -- but this time as prisoners, and at gunpoint.[36]
Pay discrimination lawsuits
United States Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg stated,
Lilly Ledbetter was a supervisor at Goodyear Tire and Rubber's plant in Gadsden, Alabama, from 1979 until her retirement in 1998. For most of those years, she worked as an area manager, a position largely occupied by men. Initially, Ledbetter's salary was in line with the salaries of men performing substantially similar work. Over time, however, her pay slipped in comparison to the pay of male area managers with equal or less seniority. By the end of 1997, Ledbetter was the only woman working as an area manager and the pay discrepancy between Ledbetter and her 15 male counterparts was stark: Ledbetter was paid $3,727 per month; the lowest paid male area manager received $4,286 per month, the highest paid, $5,236.[37]
Lilly Ledbetter sued Goodyear claiming she was paid less than men doing the same work. She won the suit and was awarded $360,000, the jury deciding that Goodyear had clearly engaged in discrimination. The case was appealed to the Supreme Court. In Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 550 U.S. ___ (2007), Justice Alito held for the five-justice majority that employers are protected from lawsuits over race or gender pay discrimination if the claims are based on decisions made by the employer 180 days ago or more. The United States Congress overturned this decision by passing the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009 which was the first bill signed into law by President Obama.[38]
This was a case of statutory rather than constitutional interpretation. The plaintiff in this case, Lilly Ledbetter, characterized her situation as one where "disparate pay is received during the statutory limitations period, but is the result of intentionally discriminatory pay decisions that occurred outside the limitations period." In rejecting Ledbetter's appeal, the Supreme Court said that "she could have, and should have, sued" when the pay decisions were made, instead of waiting beyond the 180-day statutory charging period.
Justice Ginsburg dissented from the opinion of the Court,[37] joined by Justices Stevens, Souter, and Breyer. She argued against applying the 180-day limit to pay discrimination, because discrimination often occurs in small increments over large periods of time. Furthermore, the pay information of fellow workers is typically confidential and unavailable for comparison. Ginsburg argued that pay discrimination is inherently different from adverse actions, such as termination. Adverse actions are obvious, but small pay discrepancy is often difficult to recognize until more than 180 days of the pay change. Ginsburg argued that the broad remedial purpose of the statute was incompatible with the Court's "cramped" interpretation. Her dissent asserted that the employer had been, "Knowingly carrying past pay discrimination forward" during the 180-day charging period, and therefore could be held liable.
Environmental record
Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst identified Goodyear as the 19th-largest corporate producer of air pollution in the United States, with roughly 4.16 million lbs of toxins released into the air annually. Major pollutants included sulfuric acid, cobalt compounds, and chlorine.[39] The Center for Public Integrity reports the Goodyear has been named as a potentially responsible party in at least 54 of the nation's Superfund toxic waste sites. On February 8, 2008, Goodyear announced the launch of an environmentally friendly tire produced using a cornstarch-based material. The Goodyear Eagle LS2000 partially replaces the traditional carbon black and silica with filler materials derived from corn starch thanks to "BioTRED compounding technology". The new technology increases the tires "flexibility and resistance to energy loss", which extend the tires life-span and lessen the impact on the environment.[40] Similarly, Goodyear announced on April 22, 2008, that it had joined the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's SmartWay Transport Partnership. The transport partnership is an attempt between the truck transportation industry and the EPA to reduce air pollution and greenhouse emissions as well as increase energy efficiency. The SmartWay partnership's tractors and trailers will use Goodyear's Fuel Max linehaul tires that increase fuel efficiency while reducing emissions. According to Goodyear and EPA officials "the fuel-efficient line-haul tires deliver up to 4% improved truck fuel economy, and when used with other SmartWay-qualified components, each 18- wheel tractor and trailer used in long-haul can produce savings of up to 4,000 gallons per year, or more than $11,000 annually."[41]
Goodyear's plants in Aurangabad and Ballabhgarh, India have received recognition for their excellence in energy conservation, efficiency and management with awards from both state and national governments.[42]
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act charges
On February 24, 2015, Goodyear agreed to pay more than $16 million to settle Foreign Corrupt Practices Act "FCPA" charges that two of its African subsidiaries allegedly paid $3.2 million in bribes that generated $14,122,535 in illicit profits.[43] The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission "SEC" FCPA charges involved Goodyear subsidiaries in Kenya and Angola for allegedly paying bribes to government and private-sector workers in exchange for sales in each country.[44] According to the SEC because "Goodyear did not prevent or detect these improper payments because it failed to implement adequate FCPA compliance controls at its subsidiaries" and, for the Kenyan subsidiary, "because it failed to conduct adequate due diligence" prior to its acquisition. It was not alleged that Goodyear had any involvement with or knowledge of its subsidiaries' improper conduct.[45]
Goodyear products
Automotive
Assurance (Passenger All Season) TripleTred All Season Triplemax ComforTred Touring FuelMax CS Fuel Max (SUV) CS TripleTred All Season (SUV) Weather Ready
Integrity (OE All Season)
Fortera (SUV) Silent Armor TripleTread HL SL
Wrangler (truck) Silent Armor All Terrain Adventure AT/R AT/S AT/SA RS/A RT/S SR-A TG HP HP AW MTR with Kevlar DuraTrac DuraGrip Radial (235/75R15 only)
EfficientGrip (Summer Tires) EfficientGrip Performance EfficientGrip Compact
Eagle (Touring/Performance/OE) Eagle F1 Eagle F1 Asym SUV Eagle F1 Supercar Eagle F1 GS-D3 Eagle F1 Directional 5 Eagle F1 Asym Eagle F1 Asym 2 Eagle F1 Asym 3 Eagle Efficient Grip Eagle Efficient Grip Performance Eagle GT3 Eagle LS Eagle LS2 Eagle NCT Eagle RS-A Eagle RS-A 2 Eagle RV Eagle Sport Excellence Response Edge Carbon Fiber Technology
Nordic (Winter tires)
UltraGrip Ice (Winter tires)
UltraGrip Ice WRT (Winter tires)
UltraGrip Winter (Winter tires)
Winter Command (Winter tires)
KhADI-27
Commercial
Commercial Truck Cargo G26 Cargo Marathon Cargo Marathon 2 Cargo Vector Cargo Vector 2 Fuel Max Duraseal
Off The Road Tires Articulated Dump Truck Rigid Haulage Truck Mobile Crane Scaper Port & Container Handling Dozer and Loader Mine Service Motor Grader
ATV Tires Rawhide Camo Rawhide MT/R
RV Tires Unisteel series (G670RV, G149RSA, G169RSA, G647RSS, G614RST) Wrangler HT (all weather) Marathon (trailer towing)
Aviation
Non-tire industrial (licensed products produced by Veyance Technologies)
Airsprings
Industrial hose
Hydraulic products
Conveyor belt products
Power transmission products
Molded transportation products (vibration control)
Rubber Track
Isoprene monomer
Synthetic rubber for medical applications
Synthetic rubber for chewing gum
Veyance Technologies was purchased by ContiTech and no longer has the rights to Goodyear's licenses.[46]
Goodyear-branded wiper blades are made under license by Saver Automotive, in Ohio. The wipers were never under the Veyance umbrella.
Manufacturing and development facilities
Location | DOT plant code[47] | Product or activity[48] |
---|---|---|
Akron, Ohio, USA | MB | Global headquarters, North America headquarters, Goodyear Dunlop Tires North America headquarters, innovation center, racing tires, chemicals, tire proving grounds, airship operations |
Danville, Virginia, USA | MC | Aircraft tires, commercial tires |
Gadsden, Alabama, USA | MD | Consumer tires |
Lawton, Oklahoma, USA | M6 | Consumer tires |
Topeka, Kansas, USA | MJ | Commercial tires, OTR tires |
Hebron, Ohio, USA | P1 | Research and development[49] |
Fayetteville, North Carolina, USA | PJ | Passenger car tires |
Tyler, Texas, USA | PL | Passenger Car Tires; closed in 2006[50] |
Bayport, Texas, USA | Chemicals | |
Beaumont, Texas, USA | Synthetic rubber | |
Houston, Texas, USA | Synthetic rubber | |
Niagara Falls, New York, USA | Chemicals | |
Dębica, Poland | Passenger Car Tires, Truck Tires | |
Statesville, North Carolina, USA | Tire molds | |
Social Circle, Georgia, USA | Tread rubber | |
Napanee, Ontario, Canada | 4B | Passenger car tires |
Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada | PC | Consumer tires |
Valencia, Venezuela | PB | Consumer tires, commercial tires; closed in 2018[51] |
São Paulo, Brazil | MX | Latin America headquarters, aircraft tires, aircraft tire retreading |
Americana, Brazil | Y1 | Tire proving grounds, consumer tires, commercial tires, OTR tires |
Lima, Peru | NT | Consumer tires, commercial tires |
Philippsburg, Germany | ND | High-performance passenger car tires, winter tires |
Bangkok, Thailand | NY | Consumer tires, aircraft tires, aircraft retreading |
Pulandian, China | TC | Consumer tires, commercial tires |
Santiago, Chile | M7 | Consumer tires |
Cali, Colombia | MY | Commercial tires, OTR tires |
Amiens, France | NC | Consumer tires |
Waluj, India | 1W | |
Faridabad, India | NK | |
Adapazarı, Turkey | CO | Consumer tires |
İzmit, Turkey | PA | Commercial tires |
Selangor, Malaysia | T8 | |
Luxembourg, Luxembourg | KM | Goodyear Innovation center Luxembourg (GIC*L), regional calendering center, commercial tires, OTR tires, tire proving grounds, tire molds, tire plant |
Luxembourg, Luxembourg | NJ | |
Taipei, Taiwan | L1 | |
Shahekou, China | 7L | |
Uitenhage, South Africa | NW | Consumer tires, commercial tires, agricultural tires, OTR tires |
Bogor, Indonesia | NL | |
Wolverhampton, England | NB | Mixing center, retreading – This site has now begun to cease operations and will be completely closed by 2017.[52] |
See also
List of tire companies
NASCAR Canadian Tire Series