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'''The Chemours Company''' (NYSE: CC; pronounced ''kem-ORZ'') is an American chemical corporation headquartered in [[Wilmington, Delaware]], that was formed in 2015 as a spin-off from [[DuPont]]. Founded in July 2015, the company has its corporate headquarters in [[Wilmington]], [[Delaware]]. Drawing on more than two centuries of chemical industry history inherited from its parent company, Chemours describes itself as "a new company with over 200 years of history, created from the DuPont performance chemicals businesses." The company is one of [[Delaware]]'s largest corporate employers and anchor tenants in downtown [[Wilmington]], occupying the storied [[DuPont Building]] on [[Rodney Square]]. As both a major economic presence and a source of significant environmental litigation, Chemours occupies a prominent and sometimes contested place in the state's corporate landscape.
'''The Chemours Company''' (NYSE: CC; pronounced ''kem-ORZ'') is an American chemical corporation headquartered in [[Wilmington, Delaware]], formed on July 1, 2015, as a spin-off from [[DuPont]]. Drawing on more than two centuries of chemical industry history inherited from its parent company, Chemours describes itself as "a new company with over 200 years of history, created from the DuPont performance chemicals businesses."<ref name="chemours_history">{{cite web |title=Our History |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/about-chemours/history |work=Chemours |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The company is one of [[Delaware]]'s largest corporate employers and a major anchor tenant in downtown [[Wilmington]], occupying the historic [[DuPont Building]] on [[Rodney Square]]. As both a significant economic presence and a source of consequential environmental litigation — particularly around per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) — Chemours holds a prominent and sometimes contested place in Delaware's corporate story.


== Origins and Founding ==
== Origins and Founding ==


In October 2013, [[DuPont]] announced that it was planning to spin off its "performance chemicals" business into a new publicly traded company in mid-2015. DuPont filed its initial Form 10 with the SEC in December 2014 and announced that the new company would be called "The Chemours Company." The name is a portmanteau of the words ''chemical'' and ''Nemours'', a nod to DuPont's full name, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. The Chemours Company officially began its journey on July 1, 2015, emerging as an independent entity following its spin-off from DuPont. This strategic separation was initiated by DuPont in October 2013 to streamline its operations and concentrate on more dynamic growth sectors.
In October 2013, [[DuPont]] announced plans to spin off its "performance chemicals" business into a new publicly traded company, targeting a mid-2015 separation. The move was intended to let DuPont concentrate on higher-growth segments such as agriculture and specialty materials, and it came as DuPont was also pursuing what would eventually become its 2017 merger with Dow Chemical. DuPont filed an initial Form 10 with the Securities and Exchange Commission in December 2014 and announced the new entity would be called "The Chemours Company."<ref name="chemours_history"/> The name is a portmanteau of ''chemical'' and ''Nemours'', a nod to DuPont's formal name, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.


DuPont, which had been founded in 1802, established Chemours as a $6 billion global firm focused on the performance chemicals business, in anticipation of DuPont's merger with Dow. This transition, however, was not without its complexities; Chemours commenced operations burdened by approximately $4 billion in inherited debt and assumed responsibility for various legal liabilities, particularly those stemming from environmental contamination lawsuits linked to chemicals such as C8 and GenX.
The Chemours Company began independent operations on July 1, 2015. DuPont established Chemours as a roughly $6 billion global firm focused on performance chemicals, but the transition was not clean: Chemours started life burdened by approximately $4 billion in inherited debt and assumed legal responsibility for a wide range of environmental claims previously held by DuPont, particularly those tied to fluorochemical contamination involving compounds known as C8 and GenX.<ref name="chemours_history"/> Most of Chemours' initial leadership and more than 8,000 employees had previously worked within DuPont's performance chemicals division.


Most of Chemours' initial leadership and more than 8,000 of its employees were once part of DuPont. The company's CC ticker symbol on the [[New York Stock Exchange]] is also a play on DuPont's DD symbol; it was also formerly used by the electronics retailer, Circuit City, prior to its bankruptcy in 2009. In less than two years, Chemours made the 2017 Fortune 500 list.
The company's CC ticker symbol on the [[New York Stock Exchange]] was a deliberate echo of DuPont's long-standing DD symbol. It had previously been used by the electronics retailer Circuit City before that company's bankruptcy in 2009. Within two years of its founding, Chemours appeared on the 2017 Fortune 500 list, reflecting the substantial scale of the businesses it had absorbed from DuPont.


== Delaware Headquarters and Local Presence ==
== Delaware Headquarters and Local Presence ==


Significantly, Chemours decided to stay headquartered in [[Delaware]] when it was spun off, although other states made bids to lure it away. Chemours announced that it would locate its global headquarters in [[Wilmington, Delaware]]. After considering other potential locations in the United States, Chemours chose Delaware because of the area's highly educated workforce, close proximity to customers, and favorable changes to the state's corporate tax structure.
When Chemours was spun off, other states actively bid to attract the new company's headquarters. Delaware won out. Chemours cited the region's educated workforce, proximity to customers along the Northeast Corridor, and changes to the state's corporate tax structure as decisive factors in its choice to remain in Wilmington.<ref name="chemours_hq_announcement">{{cite web |title=The Chemours Company Selects Wilmington, Delaware for Its Global Headquarters |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2016/the-chemours-company-selects-wilmington-delaware-for-its-global-headquarters |work=Chemours |date=2016 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


The company's selection of the historic [[DuPont Building]] as its permanent base was a defining moment for downtown [[Wilmington]]. On January 15, 2019, Chemours reopened its newly renovated corporate headquarters in the DuPont Building, a registered historic landmark in downtown [[Wilmington]], Delaware. The return to the 106-year-old building, now owned and operated by The Buccini/Pollin Group, came after a 20-month renovation that transformed its interior into a light-filled, modern, and elegant open workspace environment. The new headquarters occupies 280,000 square feet in an 11-story segment of the building, and Chemours' share of construction costs was $30 million.
The company's selection of the historic [[DuPont Building]] as its permanent base was a defining moment for downtown Wilmington. On January 15, 2019, Chemours reopened its newly renovated corporate headquarters there, following a 20-month renovation of the 106-year-old building now owned and operated by The Buccini/Pollin Group that transformed its interior into a modern open workspace environment.<ref name="chemours_hq_renovation">{{cite web |title=Chemours Unveils Renovated Headquarters, Renewing Commitment to Wilmington |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2019/chemours-unveils-renovated-headquarters-renewing-commitment-to-wilmington |work=Chemours |date=2019-01-15 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The headquarters occupies 280,000 square feet across 11 stories of the building, and Chemours' share of construction costs was $30 million.<ref name="dbt_hq_opening">{{cite web |title=Chemours Opens New Global HQ in Renovated DuPont Building |url=https://delawarebusinesstimes.com/news/features/chemours-opens-new-global-hq/ |work=Delaware Business Times |date=2019 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Approximately 850 employees, contractors, and consultants work at the headquarters. Chemours employs roughly 1,000 people in Delaware in total, between its headquarters and its research and development facilities.<ref name="choosedelaware_hq">{{cite web |title=Chemours Opens Global HQ in Renovated DuPont Building |url=https://www.choosedelaware.com/in-the-news/chemours-opens-new-global-hq-in-renovated-dupont-building/ |work=Choose Delaware |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


Chemours made a conscious decision not to change the building's name to the Chemours Building, out of respect for the company's heritage, which dates back to the founding of DuPont on Brandywine Creek in 1802. Approximately 850 employees, contractors, and consultants work in the company's headquarters, which occupies 280,000 square feet across 11 stories of the building.
Chemours made a deliberate decision not to rename the building after itself, out of respect for the heritage connecting the structure to the founding of DuPont on Brandywine Creek in 1802. The DuPont Building name stands.
 
Chemours employs about 1,000 people in Delaware at its headquarters and labs. The company also maintains research and development facilities within the state, including the [[University of Delaware]] partnership described below.


== Products and Business Operations ==
== Products and Business Operations ==


Chemours manufactures and sells performance chemicals falling within three segments: Titanium Technologies (titanium dioxide); Fluoroproducts (refrigerants and industrial fluoropolymer resins and derivatives including Freon, Teflon, Viton, Nafion, ECCtreme ECA and Krytox); and Chemical Solutions (cyanide, sulfuric acid, aniline, methylamines, and reactive metals).
Chemours organizes its operations into three principal segments. Titanium Technologies produces titanium dioxide sold under the Ti-Pure brand, used widely as a white pigment in paints, plastics, and coatings. Chemours' first dedicated Ti-Pure plant opened in [[Edgemoor, Delaware]], at a site that previously housed an iron mill whose girders helped build the Brooklyn Bridge. The Fluoroproducts segment manufactures refrigerants and industrial fluoropolymer resins and derivatives, including the well-known brands Freon, Teflon, Viton, Nafion, ECCtreme ECA, and Krytox. The Chemical Solutions segment covers cyanide, sulfuric acid, aniline, methylamines, and reactive metals.
 
Chemours is the manufacturer of Teflon, the brand name of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), known for its anti-stick properties. It also produces titanium dioxide and refrigerant gases. Titanium dioxide, sold under the Ti-Pure brand, is used as a white pigment in paints, plastics, and coatings. Chemours' first dedicated Ti-Pure™ plant opened in [[Edgemoor, Delaware]], at a site that previously housed an iron mill which produced girders for the Brooklyn Bridge.


Chemours serves customers in over 130 countries with a deep, collaborative knowledge in key industries including semiconductors, fine chemical manufacturing, and photovoltaics. The company reported net sales of $5.8 billion for the full year 2024, underscoring its significant market presence and the critical role its products play in everyday applications, from automotive to paints and plastics.
Chemours is the manufacturer of Teflon, the brand name of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), a polymer widely recognized for its non-stick and heat-resistant properties. Its Opteon line of low-global-warming-potential refrigerants has been a growing area of commercial focus, driven by regulatory changes in North America and Europe that push industrial and commercial cooling toward more climate-friendly alternatives.<ref name="chemours_global_reach">{{cite web |title=Chemours Global Reach and Locations Worldwide |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/about-chemours/global-reach |work=Chemours |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> In early 2026, Chemours and French server manufacturer 2CRSi announced that an Opteon-based fluid had successfully qualified for use in 2CRSi's immersion-cooled server platforms, an application the company is targeting as data center energy demands rise.<ref>{{cite web |title=Following Successful Fluid Qualification, Chemours & 2CRSi Join Forces to Accelerate Deployment of Two-Phase Immersion Cooling |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2026/following-successful-fluid-qualification-chemours-2crsi-join-forces-to-accelerate-deployment-of-two |work=Chemours |date=2026 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


Chemours serves plastics and coatings, mining, oil refining, refrigeration and air conditioning, automotive, energy, and telecommunications, electronics and general industries. Its Opteon line of low-global-warming-potential refrigerants has been a significant area of growth, as regulatory changes around the world push industries toward more sustainable cooling alternatives.
Chemours serves customers in over 130 countries across industries including semiconductors, fine chemical manufacturing, photovoltaics, automotive, oil refining, refrigeration and air conditioning, energy, and telecommunications.<ref name="chemours_global_reach"/> The company reported net sales of $5.8 billion for the full year 2024.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Chemours Company Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Results |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2026/the-chemours-company-reports-fourth-quarter-and-full-year-2025-results |work=Chemours |date=2026 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


== Research, Innovation, and University Partnerships ==
== Research, Innovation, and University Partnerships ==


A central component of Chemours' Delaware identity is its research partnership with the [[University of Delaware]]. Chemours built its new innovation center, The Chemours Discovery Hub, and partnered with the [[University of Delaware]] on the university's STAR campus. In 2020, Chemours opened its Discovery Hub, a $150 million investment with 130 custom labs and 300+ employees. Located on the University of Delaware STAR Campus, the state-of-the-art, global facility is one of the largest research and development centers in the state of Delaware and within the chemical industry.
A central part of Chemours' Delaware identity is its research partnership with the [[University of Delaware]]. In 2020, Chemours opened the Chemours Discovery Hub on the University of Delaware's STAR Campus — a $150 million investment housing 130 custom laboratories and more than 300 employees.<ref name="chemours_discovery_hub">{{cite web |title=The Chemours Discovery Hub |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/chemistry-in-action/catalyst-for-innovation |work=Chemours |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> It is one of the largest private research and development centers in the state and among the larger ones in the U.S. chemical industry.


The facility was designed to keep 330 research jobs in the [[Wilmington]] area and help prepare Delaware students for success in science and technology research jobs. Chemours scientists are working on advancing and developing new technologies that are critical to improving the nation's national security, technology leadership, and energy transition — including more efficient and sustainable lithium-ion batteries, immersion cooling technologies for data centers, semiconductor manufacturing, and low-global-warming-potential refrigerants.
The facility was designed to keep 330 research jobs in the Wilmington area and help prepare Delaware students for careers in science and technology. Chemours scientists at the hub are working on advancing lithium-ion battery efficiency, immersion cooling technologies for data centers, semiconductor manufacturing processes, and next-generation refrigerants.<ref name="chemours_ud_partnership">{{cite web |title=University of Delaware Partnership |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/chemistry-in-action/future-chemistry/university-of-delaware-partnership |work=Chemours |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


Through partnerships with the University of Delaware and Delaware State University, Chemours was selected to receive over $40 million in federal funding to advance research in the Hydrogen Economy in the state of Delaware. In addition, Chemours has invested almost an additional $2 million in STEM and sustainability education programs and scholarships since 2020.
Through partnerships with the University of Delaware and Delaware State University, Chemours was selected to receive more than $40 million in federal funding to advance hydrogen economy research in Delaware. The company has also invested nearly $2 million in STEM and sustainability education programs and scholarships in the state since 2020.<ref name="chemours_ud_partnership"/>


== Environmental Controversies and Legal Proceedings ==
== Environmental Controversies and Legal Proceedings ==


Chemours has been the subject of major environmental litigation since its founding, in large part because it assumed legal liability for environmental claims against [[DuPont]] as a condition of the spin-off. Chemours has assumed various liabilities arising from lawsuits against DuPont.
Chemours has faced major environmental litigation since its founding, largely because it assumed legal liability for environmental claims against [[DuPont]] as a condition of the spin-off agreement. That liability has proven substantial.
 
The most prominent controversy involves PFAS — per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a broad class of synthetic compounds sometimes called "forever chemicals" because they don't break down readily in the environment or in the human body. Chemours' Fayetteville Works plant in Bladen County, North Carolina, was found to have discharged a chemical compound known as GenX — a processing aid used in Teflon production — into the Cape Fear River, which serves as a drinking water source for the Wilmington, North Carolina, metropolitan area. The discharges prompted investigations by state and federal regulators and drew national attention to PFAS contamination as a public health issue.<ref name="pfas_project_chemours">{{cite web |title=Delaware's Chemours announces a billion-dollar profit, one day after EPA takes action |url=https://pfasproject.com/2019/02/17/delawares-chemours-announces-a-billion-dollar-profit-one-day-after-epa-takes-action/ |work=The PFAS Project Lab |date=2019-02-17 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
In June 2023, Chemours, together with DuPont and Corteva, settled claims that the three companies had contaminated U.S. public water systems with PFAS compounds for a combined $1.19 billion. Chemours' share of the settlement was $592 million, with DuPont and Corteva covering the remainder.<ref name="chemours_pfas_settlement_2023">{{cite web |title=Chemours, DuPont, and Corteva Reach Comprehensive PFAS Settlement with U.S. Water Systems |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2023/chemours-dupont-and-corteva-reach-comprehensive-pfas-settlement-with-us-water-systems |work=Chemours |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
In September 2023, a Dutch court declared Chemours liable for pollution caused by its Teflon-producing plant in Dordrecht, South Holland. The court found that Chemours' predecessor DuPont had knowingly withheld information between 1984 and 1998 about the harmful effects of the substances it used and emitted, rendering the pollution unlawful under Dutch law.
 
In August 2025, Chemours, DuPont, and Corteva announced a settlement to resolve all pending environmental and other claims brought by the State of New Jersey, covering various litigation matters and state directives related to PFAS contamination. The settlement involves payments structured over 25 years, with a pre-tax net present value of approximately $500 million shared among the three companies.<ref name="chemours_nj_settlement">{{cite web |title=Chemours, DuPont and Corteva Reach Agreement with the State of New Jersey to Comprehensively Resolve All Environmental Claims Including PFAS |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2025/chemours-dupont-and-corteva-reach-agreement-with-the-state-of-new-jersey |work=Chemours |date=2025-08-04 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
== Corporate Governance ==


The most prominent ongoing controversy involves per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), a class of synthetic chemicals sometimes called "forever chemicals" because they do not readily break down in the environment. Chemours' plant in Bladen County, North Carolina, was found to be dumping vast quantities of a chemical dubbed "GenX," a precursor of Teflon, into the Cape Fear River. In North Carolina, the Chemours Fayetteville plant released GenX compounds into the Cape Fear River, which is a drinking water source for the [[Wilmington]] area.
In February 2024, the company's board placed CEO Mark Newman, CFO Jonathan Lock, and Financial Controller Camela Wisel on administrative leave after an internal review found that members of senior management had delayed payments to certain vendors in order to influence incentive compensation calculations and secure larger bonuses. The board determined the conduct violated the company's ethics standards, and all three officers were subsequently separated from the company.


In June 2023, Chemours, together with DuPont and Corteva, settled claims that they contaminated U.S. public water systems with toxic "forever chemicals" (PFAS) for $1.19 billion, with Chemours paying $592 million and DuPont and Corteva paying the rest. In September 2023, a court in The Netherlands declared Chemours liable for pollution caused by the Teflon-producing plant in the city of Dordrecht, South Holland. The court stated that Chemours' predecessor DuPont had willingly withheld crucial information between 1984 and 1998 about the harmful effects of the substances it used and emitted, which made the pollution unlawful.
In December 2025, Chemours announced the appointment of Michael Foley as President of Titanium Technologies, alongside the departure of Damián Gumpel from the company's leadership team.<ref>{{cite web |title=Chemours Appoints Michael Foley as President of Titanium Technologies; Announces Departure of Damián Gumpel |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2025/chemours-appoints-michael-foley-as-president-of-titanium-technologies-announces-departure |work=Chemours |date=2025-12-04 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


In August 2025, Chemours, DuPont, and Corteva announced a settlement to comprehensively resolve all pending environmental and other claims by the State of New Jersey against the companies in various litigation matters and other state directives. The settlement involves payments over 25 years, with a pre-tax net present value of approximately $500 million to be shared by the parties.
== Financial Profile ==


In February 2024, CEO Mark Newman, CFO Jonathan Lock, and Financial Controller Camela Wisel were placed on administrative leave by the company's board due to members of senior management delaying payments to some vendors to aid incentive compensation and obtain a bigger bonus. The officers' actions violated the company's standards for ethics.
Chemours began its independent existence carrying roughly $4 billion in debt inherited from DuPont. That debt load has been actively managed over the decade since the spin-off. In 2025, the company completed a private offering of $700 million in 7.875% Senior Unsecured Notes due 2034, upsized from an initial offering target, as part of its ongoing capital structure management.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Chemours Company Announces Upsizing and Pricing of Private Offering of $700,000,000 of 7.875% Senior Notes Due 2034 |url=https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/the-chemours-company-announces-upsizing-and-pricing-of-private-offering-of-700-000-000-of-7-875-senior-notes-due-2034--302699031.html |work=PR Newswire |date=2025 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Net sales for the full year 2024 were $5.8 billion. The company trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol CC.


== References ==
== References ==


<references>
<references/>
<ref name="chemours_history">{{cite web |title=Our History |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/about-chemours/history |work=Chemours |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="dbt_innovation">{{cite web |title=Innovation Delaware Company to Watch: Chemours |url=https://delawarebusinesstimes.com/news/innovation-delaware-company-watch-chemours/ |work=Delaware Business Times |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="chemours_hq_announcement">{{cite web |title=The Chemours Company Selects Wilmington, Delaware for Its Global Headquarters |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2016/the-chemours-company-selects-wilmington-delaware-for-its-global-headquarters |work=Chemours |date=2016 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="chemours_ud_partnership">{{cite web |title=University of Delaware Partnership |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/chemistry-in-action/future-chemistry/university-of-delaware-partnership |work=Chemours |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="chemours_discovery_hub">{{cite web |title=The Chemours Discovery Hub |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/chemistry-in-action/catalyst-for-innovation |work=Chemours |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="chemours_hq_renovation">{{cite web |title=Chemours Unveils Renovated Headquarters, Renewing Commitment to Wilmington |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2019/chemours-unveils-renovated-headquarters-renewing-commitment-to-wilmington |work=Chemours |date=2019-01-15 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="chemours_pfas_settlement_2023">{{cite web |title=Chemours, DuPont, and Corteva Reach Comprehensive PFAS Settlement with U.S. Water Systems |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2023/chemours-dupont-and-corteva-reach-comprehensive-pfas-settlement-with-us-water-systems |work=Chemours |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="chemours_nj_settlement">{{cite web |title=Chemours, DuPont and Corteva Reach Agreement with the State of New Jersey to Comprehensively Resolve All Environmental Claims Including PFAS |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/news-media-center/all-news/press-releases/2025/chemours-dupont-and-corteva-reach-agreement-with-the-state-of-new-jersey |work=Chemours |date=2025-08-04 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="dbt_hq_opening">{{cite web |title=Chemours Opens New Global HQ in Renovated DuPont Building |url=https://delawarebusinesstimes.com/news/features/chemours-opens-new-global-hq/ |work=Delaware Business Times |date=2019 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="choosedelaware_hq">{{cite web |title=Chemours Opens Global HQ in Renovated DuPont Building |url=https://www.choosedelaware.com/in-the-news/chemours-opens-new-global-hq-in-renovated-dupont-building/ |work=Choose Delaware |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="pfas_project_chemours">{{cite web |title=Delaware's Chemours announces a billion-dollar profit, one day after EPA takes action |url=https://pfasproject.com/2019/02/17/delawares-chemours-announces-a-billion-dollar-profit-one-day-after-epa-takes-action/ |work=The PFAS Project Lab |date=2019-02-17 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="chemours_global_reach">{{cite web |title=Chemours Global Reach and Locations Worldwide |url=https://www.chemours.com/en/about-chemours/global-reach |work=Chemours |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
</references>


[[Category:Companies based in Wilmington, Delaware]]
[[Category:Companies based in Wilmington, Delaware]]
[[Category:Chemical companies of the United States]]
[[Category:Chemical companies of the United States]]
[[Category:DuPont]]
[[Category:Manufacturing in Delaware]]

Latest revision as of 05:08, 20 April 2026


The Chemours Company (NYSE: CC; pronounced kem-ORZ) is an American chemical corporation headquartered in Wilmington, Delaware, formed on July 1, 2015, as a spin-off from DuPont. Drawing on more than two centuries of chemical industry history inherited from its parent company, Chemours describes itself as "a new company with over 200 years of history, created from the DuPont performance chemicals businesses."[1] The company is one of Delaware's largest corporate employers and a major anchor tenant in downtown Wilmington, occupying the historic DuPont Building on Rodney Square. As both a significant economic presence and a source of consequential environmental litigation — particularly around per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) — Chemours holds a prominent and sometimes contested place in Delaware's corporate story.

Origins and Founding

In October 2013, DuPont announced plans to spin off its "performance chemicals" business into a new publicly traded company, targeting a mid-2015 separation. The move was intended to let DuPont concentrate on higher-growth segments such as agriculture and specialty materials, and it came as DuPont was also pursuing what would eventually become its 2017 merger with Dow Chemical. DuPont filed an initial Form 10 with the Securities and Exchange Commission in December 2014 and announced the new entity would be called "The Chemours Company."[1] The name is a portmanteau of chemical and Nemours, a nod to DuPont's formal name, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.

The Chemours Company began independent operations on July 1, 2015. DuPont established Chemours as a roughly $6 billion global firm focused on performance chemicals, but the transition was not clean: Chemours started life burdened by approximately $4 billion in inherited debt and assumed legal responsibility for a wide range of environmental claims previously held by DuPont, particularly those tied to fluorochemical contamination involving compounds known as C8 and GenX.[1] Most of Chemours' initial leadership and more than 8,000 employees had previously worked within DuPont's performance chemicals division.

The company's CC ticker symbol on the New York Stock Exchange was a deliberate echo of DuPont's long-standing DD symbol. It had previously been used by the electronics retailer Circuit City before that company's bankruptcy in 2009. Within two years of its founding, Chemours appeared on the 2017 Fortune 500 list, reflecting the substantial scale of the businesses it had absorbed from DuPont.

Delaware Headquarters and Local Presence

When Chemours was spun off, other states actively bid to attract the new company's headquarters. Delaware won out. Chemours cited the region's educated workforce, proximity to customers along the Northeast Corridor, and changes to the state's corporate tax structure as decisive factors in its choice to remain in Wilmington.[2]

The company's selection of the historic DuPont Building as its permanent base was a defining moment for downtown Wilmington. On January 15, 2019, Chemours reopened its newly renovated corporate headquarters there, following a 20-month renovation of the 106-year-old building — now owned and operated by The Buccini/Pollin Group — that transformed its interior into a modern open workspace environment.[3] The headquarters occupies 280,000 square feet across 11 stories of the building, and Chemours' share of construction costs was $30 million.[4] Approximately 850 employees, contractors, and consultants work at the headquarters. Chemours employs roughly 1,000 people in Delaware in total, between its headquarters and its research and development facilities.[5]

Chemours made a deliberate decision not to rename the building after itself, out of respect for the heritage connecting the structure to the founding of DuPont on Brandywine Creek in 1802. The DuPont Building name stands.

Products and Business Operations

Chemours organizes its operations into three principal segments. Titanium Technologies produces titanium dioxide sold under the Ti-Pure brand, used widely as a white pigment in paints, plastics, and coatings. Chemours' first dedicated Ti-Pure plant opened in Edgemoor, Delaware, at a site that previously housed an iron mill whose girders helped build the Brooklyn Bridge. The Fluoroproducts segment manufactures refrigerants and industrial fluoropolymer resins and derivatives, including the well-known brands Freon, Teflon, Viton, Nafion, ECCtreme ECA, and Krytox. The Chemical Solutions segment covers cyanide, sulfuric acid, aniline, methylamines, and reactive metals.

Chemours is the manufacturer of Teflon, the brand name of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), a polymer widely recognized for its non-stick and heat-resistant properties. Its Opteon line of low-global-warming-potential refrigerants has been a growing area of commercial focus, driven by regulatory changes in North America and Europe that push industrial and commercial cooling toward more climate-friendly alternatives.[6] In early 2026, Chemours and French server manufacturer 2CRSi announced that an Opteon-based fluid had successfully qualified for use in 2CRSi's immersion-cooled server platforms, an application the company is targeting as data center energy demands rise.[7]

Chemours serves customers in over 130 countries across industries including semiconductors, fine chemical manufacturing, photovoltaics, automotive, oil refining, refrigeration and air conditioning, energy, and telecommunications.[6] The company reported net sales of $5.8 billion for the full year 2024.[8]

Research, Innovation, and University Partnerships

A central part of Chemours' Delaware identity is its research partnership with the University of Delaware. In 2020, Chemours opened the Chemours Discovery Hub on the University of Delaware's STAR Campus — a $150 million investment housing 130 custom laboratories and more than 300 employees.[9] It is one of the largest private research and development centers in the state and among the larger ones in the U.S. chemical industry.

The facility was designed to keep 330 research jobs in the Wilmington area and help prepare Delaware students for careers in science and technology. Chemours scientists at the hub are working on advancing lithium-ion battery efficiency, immersion cooling technologies for data centers, semiconductor manufacturing processes, and next-generation refrigerants.[10]

Through partnerships with the University of Delaware and Delaware State University, Chemours was selected to receive more than $40 million in federal funding to advance hydrogen economy research in Delaware. The company has also invested nearly $2 million in STEM and sustainability education programs and scholarships in the state since 2020.[10]

Environmental Controversies and Legal Proceedings

Chemours has faced major environmental litigation since its founding, largely because it assumed legal liability for environmental claims against DuPont as a condition of the spin-off agreement. That liability has proven substantial.

The most prominent controversy involves PFAS — per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a broad class of synthetic compounds sometimes called "forever chemicals" because they don't break down readily in the environment or in the human body. Chemours' Fayetteville Works plant in Bladen County, North Carolina, was found to have discharged a chemical compound known as GenX — a processing aid used in Teflon production — into the Cape Fear River, which serves as a drinking water source for the Wilmington, North Carolina, metropolitan area. The discharges prompted investigations by state and federal regulators and drew national attention to PFAS contamination as a public health issue.[11]

In June 2023, Chemours, together with DuPont and Corteva, settled claims that the three companies had contaminated U.S. public water systems with PFAS compounds for a combined $1.19 billion. Chemours' share of the settlement was $592 million, with DuPont and Corteva covering the remainder.[12]

In September 2023, a Dutch court declared Chemours liable for pollution caused by its Teflon-producing plant in Dordrecht, South Holland. The court found that Chemours' predecessor DuPont had knowingly withheld information between 1984 and 1998 about the harmful effects of the substances it used and emitted, rendering the pollution unlawful under Dutch law.

In August 2025, Chemours, DuPont, and Corteva announced a settlement to resolve all pending environmental and other claims brought by the State of New Jersey, covering various litigation matters and state directives related to PFAS contamination. The settlement involves payments structured over 25 years, with a pre-tax net present value of approximately $500 million shared among the three companies.[13]

Corporate Governance

In February 2024, the company's board placed CEO Mark Newman, CFO Jonathan Lock, and Financial Controller Camela Wisel on administrative leave after an internal review found that members of senior management had delayed payments to certain vendors in order to influence incentive compensation calculations and secure larger bonuses. The board determined the conduct violated the company's ethics standards, and all three officers were subsequently separated from the company.

In December 2025, Chemours announced the appointment of Michael Foley as President of Titanium Technologies, alongside the departure of Damián Gumpel from the company's leadership team.[14]

Financial Profile

Chemours began its independent existence carrying roughly $4 billion in debt inherited from DuPont. That debt load has been actively managed over the decade since the spin-off. In 2025, the company completed a private offering of $700 million in 7.875% Senior Unsecured Notes due 2034, upsized from an initial offering target, as part of its ongoing capital structure management.[15] Net sales for the full year 2024 were $5.8 billion. The company trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol CC.

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