What if the pipeline to the U.S. dries up? G&M (1)
Eestlased Kanadas | 12 Apr 2017  | EWR OnlineEWR
When the founders of plastic pipe maker Ipex Group of Cos. came to Canada from then-Soviet occupied Estonia in 1949, they started manufacturing hula-hoops. Now they want to avoid getting hooped by cross-border trade restrictions.

“The founders made their first million dollars within three years of coming to Canada, but they figured it might be a fad,” says Veso Sobot, engineer and director of corporate affairs for the Mississauga-headquartered Ipex Management Inc.

“So they straightened out the hoops and started making pipe.” Today, Ipex has 18 plants in Canada and seven in the United States.

“We supply the North American market with pipe for construction,” Mr. Sobot says. Ipex makes thermoplastic pipe used in infrastructure for plumbing in buildings, factories and municipal water systems.

“There’s a lot of opportunity for supplying the infrastructure market in both Canada and the United States, and we’ve been doing so for 67 years,” Mr. Sobot says.

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Kommentaarid on kirjutatud EWR lugejate poolt. Nende sisu ei pruugi ühtida EWR toimetuse seisukohtadega.
Milline võrratu fantaasia12 Apr 2017 11:25
ENSV-st tuli Kanadasse 1949. aastal FIRMA, paraku tolles sotsialistlikus riigis isegi ei tuntud taolist mõistet. Kommunistide poolt läänes asutatud firmad olid KGB ja GRU kattevarjud.
Ise 46 aastat ajakirjanikuna tegutsenuna, seal hulgas 25 aasta vältel terves laias ilmas avaldatuna, piisab mulle ainult ühest taolisest jämedast möödalaskmisest ja ma sean kahtluse alla (teinekord ülekohtuselt) ka kogu ülejäänud teksti pädevuse.

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