
Sandvik Process Systems becomes IPCO
IPCO is a new name in Industrial Process solutions but a business partner with whom many will already be familiar. Previously operating as Sandvik Process Systems, we are now an independent company within the Wallenberg group.
We continue to develop customized solutions for the processing industry, with the same people, skills and process systems – but under a new name and brand – IPCO.
We are dedicated to provide productivity in the processing of more than 1200 different products across the sulphur, chemical, fertilizer, chocolate and food industries. We also provide Double Belt Press solutions with Steel and Teflon® belts, including up- and downstream equipment and precision scattering systems as well as solid and perforated steel belts used for improving productivity and quality in the processing of products as diverse as wood-based panels, paper, food, film and more.

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In the world there are millions of forests. Some are close to urban centers, others in remote and inaccessible places, but they all fulfill a key role: maintain the balance of the planet. They are literally the lung of the earth. When talking about a new forest, the first thing that comes to mind is usually reforestation, a recent plantation or the recovery of an area razed by fire. But this discovery is on another way. It is not a forest sown recently. It is an old forest, which was there for thousands of years, buried under the ice. And now, with the thaw caused by global warming, he has emerged again.

It was created in 1881 and became a very popular place during the following decades. However, when the tree fell at the close of the 1960s, everything changed. Wawona tree was the name that had a tourist attraction from the United States, which remained standing from 1881 to 1969 in Mariposa Grove, Yosemite National Park, California.

They play a crucial role in the conservation of forest ecosystems Nature is full of wonders and surprising processes that often go unnoticed. One of these phenomena is the ability of a small animal to plant millions of trees every year, playing a crucial role in the conservation of forest ecosystems.