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The following companies are listed or have been listed on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE), Israel's only stock exchange, located in Tel Aviv. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
Israel had more companies listed in 2012 on the NASDAQ stock exchange than any country outside of the United States and China. [1] [2] As of 2011, some sixty Israeli companies are listed on the Nasdaq. [3] 2000 was the year that saw the most new Israeli listings on the exchange – 33 companies. [4]
It is headquartered in the Hasharon Industrial Park in Kadima, Israel. [1] Its chairman is Asaf Bartfeld, [2] while its chief executive officer and president is Avshalom Felber. [1] In Israel, it has built desalination plants in Hadera, Ashkelon and Soreq. [4] [5] In 2013, it agreed to design the Carlsbad desalination plant in Carlsbad ...
In addition to the Dead Sea Works, Israel Chemicals mines phosphates in the Negev desert. [12] ICL Group serves customers in Asia. [13] The company's share is a dual stock traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange since 1991 and on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol ICL, and is part of the Tel Aviv 35 Index.
TSD was founded in 2014. Their technology, developed by Joshua Altman and Prof. Moshe Tshuva at Afeka College of Engineering in Tel Aviv, uses solar energy directly to power desalination and water treatment. [1] Ze'ev Emmerich, a founder of TSD, claims their method is scalable and environmentally friendly, as well as being cheaper than reverse ...
The display in the lobby of the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange was established in 1953. [6] Even prior to this, commencing in 1935, securities trading was carried out in the Land of Israel and, afterwards, in the State of Israel at the mandate-period Anglo-Palestine Bank (today, Bank Leumi).
Mekorot (Hebrew: מקורות, lit."Sources") is the national water company of Israel and the country's top agency for water management. [1] Founded in 1937, it supplies Israel with approx. 80% of its drinking water and operates a cross-country water supply network known as the National Water Carrier.
When completed, most drinking water supplied to Israel's residents from Hadera southwards – in other words, most of the country's population – would come from desalinated seawater. [19] By 2014, Israel's desalination programs provided roughly 35% of Israel's drinking water and it is expected to supply 40% by 2015 and 70% by 2050. [20]