Tata Group
Tata Group is an Indian multinational conglomerate holding company headquartered in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. Founded in 1868 by Jamsetji Tata, the company gained international recognition after purchasing several global companies. One of India's largest conglomerates, Tata Group is owned by Tata Sons. It is one of the biggest and oldest industrial groups in the country, founded 153 years back in 1868.
Each Tata company operates independently under the guidance and supervision of its own board of directors and shareholders.
Significant Tata companies and subsidiaries include Tata Chemicals, Tata Communications, Tata Consultancy Services, Tata Consumer Products, Tata Elxsi, Tata Motors, Tata Power, Tata Steel, Voltas, Tata Cliq, Titan, Trent, Indian Hotels Company Limited, TajAir, TATA AutoComp systems Ltd, Vistara, Cromā and Indicash.
History
1868–1904
At the age of 29, Jamsetji Tata worked in his father's company. In 1870 with Rs.21,000 capital, he founded a trading company. Further he bought a bankrupt oil mill at Chinchpokli and converted it into a cotton mill, under the name Alexandra Mill which he sold for a profit after 2 years. In 1874, he set up another cotton mill at Nagpur named Empress Mill. He dreamed of achieving 4 goals, setting up an iron and steel company, a unique hotel, a world-class learning institution and a hydro-electric plant. During his lifetime, in 1903, the Taj Mahal Hotel at Colaba waterfront was opened making it the first hotel with electricity in India.1904–1938
After Jamsetji's death, his older son Dorabji Tata became the chairman in 1904. Sir Dorabji established the Tata Iron and Steel company, now known as Tata Steel in 1907. Marking the group's global ambitions, Tata Limited opened its first overseas office in London. Following the founder's goals, Western India's first hydro plant was brought to life, giving birth to Tata Power. Yet another dream, Indian Institute of Science was established with the first batch admitted in 1911.1938–1991
was made chairman of the Tata Group in 1938. Under his chairmanship, the assets of the Tata Group grew from US$101 million to over US$5 billion. Starting with 14 enterprises, upon his departure half a century later in 1988, Tata Sons had grown to a conglomerate of 95 enterprises. These enterprises consisted of ventures that the company had either started or in which they held controlling interest. New sectors such as chemicals, technology, cosmetics, marketing, engineering, and manufacturing, tea, and software services earned them recognition.In 1952, JRD founded an airline, known as Tata Air Services. In 1953, the Government of India passed the Air Corporations Act and purchased a majority stake in the carrier from Tata Sons, though JRD Tata would continue as chairman till 1977.
In 1945, Tata Motors was founded, first focused on locomotives. In 1954, it entered the commercial vehicle market after forming a joint venture with Daimler-Benz. In 1968, Tata Consultancy Services was founded.
1991-present
In 1991, Ratan Tata became chairman of Tata Group. This was also the year of economic liberalization in India, opening up the market to foreign competitors. During this time, Tata Group began to acquire a number of companies, including Tetley, Corus Group, and Jaguar and Land Rover. In 2017, Natarajan Chandrasekaran was appointed chairman.Chairman
The chairman of Tata Sons is usually the chairman of the Tata Group. As of 2020, there have been eight chairmen of Tata Group.- Jamsetji Tata
- Sir Dorab Tata
- Nowroji Saklatwala
- JRD Tata
- Ratan Tata
- Cyrus Mistry
- Ratan Tata
- Natarajan Chandrasekaran
Subsidiaries
Chemicals
- Advinus Therapeutics
- Brunner Mond
- General Chemical Industrial Products
- Magadi Soda Company
- Rallis India
- Tata Pigments Limited
Consumer products
- Casa Décor
- Infiniti Retail
- Landmark Bookstores
- Tata Ceramics
- Tata Consumer Products, second-largest global manufacturer of tea.
- * Tata Salt
- * Tata Sampann
- * Himalayan, mineral water brand
- * I-shakti
- * Tata Tea
- ** Tetley
- * Tata Coffee
- ** Eight O'Clock Coffee
- * Tata Starbucks, a 50:50 joint venture company, owned by Starbucks Corporation and Tata Consumer Products
- Tata Industries
- Tata International Ltd.
- Tata Refractories
- Tata Chemicals
- * Tata Swach
- Tata Zoya
- Titan Industries
- * Fastrack, youth fashion brand
- * Titan Eye Plus, Titan Industries optical stores
- * Tanishq
- Voltas, consumer electronics company
- Westside
E-commerce
- Tata Cliq as an E-commerce platform
- Tata cliq luxury as a shopping of luxury brands
- Starquik as an online grocery store by Tata Enterprise
Energy
- Hooghly Met Coke and Power Company
- Jamshedpur Utilities and Services Company
- Powerlinks Transmission
- Tata Petrodyne
- Tata Power, one of the largest private sector power companies
- Tata Power Delhi Distribution Ltd
- Tata Power Solar, started as a joint venture between Tata Power and BP Solar, now a wholly owned company
- Tata Power Trading
- Tata Projects
Engineering
- TAL Manufacturing Solutions
- Tata Advanced Systems Limited
- Tata Advanced Materials
- Tata AutoComp Systems Limited
- Tata Consulting Engineers Limited
- Tata Cummins
- Tata Motors, India's largest manufacturer of commercial vehicles and passenger cars; parent company of:
- * Hispano Carrocera
- * Jaguar Land Rover
- * Tata Daewoo Commercial Vehicle
- * Tata Marcopolo
- * Tata Motors European Technical Centre
- Tata Petrodyne
- Tata Precision Industries
- Tata Projects
- Telco Construction Equipment
- TRF
- Voltas Global Engineering Centre
- TitanX
Information systems and communications
- Nelco Ltd.
- Nelito Systems - Started as an IT JV of Nelco and Itochu, DTS of Japan bought the company
- Tata Business Support Services
- Tata Communications
- * VSNL International Canada
- Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., one of world's largest IT services companies
- * CMC Limited
- * Computational Research Laboratories
- Tata Elxsi
- Tata Interactive Systems
- Tata Technologies Limited
- * INCAT
- Tata Teleservices
- * Tata Sky
- * Tata DoCoMo
- Tatanet, managed connectivity and VSAT service provider
Services
- Drive India Enterprise Solutions
- Mjunction
- Tata Advanced Systems Limited
- Tata AutoComp Systems
- Tata Interactive Systems
- Tata NYK
Airlines
- Air Asia India joint venture with Air Asia
- Vistara joint venture with Singapore Airlines
Catering
- Bombay Brasserie
- Golden Dragon
- Wassabi
- Thai Pavilion
- House of Ming
Hotels
- The Indian Hotels Company
- * amã Stays & Trails
- * SeleQtions
- * Roots Corporation
- ** Ginger Hotels
- * Taj Hotels
- ** Vivanta By Taj
- ** TajAir
- ** Taj Holidays
- * The Gateway Hotels & Resorts
Financial services
- Indicash ATM
- e-Nxt Financials Ltd.
- TATA AIA Life Insurance
- TATA AIG General Insurance
- Tata Asset Management
- Tata Capital
- Tata Communications Payment Solutions
- Tata Financial Services
Holding companies
- Tata Africa Holdings
- Tata AG
- Tata International AG
- Tata Investment Corp
- Tata Limited
Realty
- Tata Housing Development Company Ltd.
- Tata Realty and Infrastructure Limited
Organisational services
- Tata Industrial Services
- Tata Quality Management Services
- Tata Services
- Tata Strategic Management Group
Logistics
- TKM Global, Logistics and Supply Chain
Iron and steel
- JAMIPOL
- NatSteel Holdings
- Tata Bearings
- Tata Steel
- *Tata BlueScope Steel
- * Tata Metaliks
- * Tayo Rolls
- * Tata Sponge Iron
- * Tata Steel Europe
- * Tata Steel KZN
- * Tata Steel BSL
- *Tata Steel Processing and Distribution
- The Tinplate Company of India
- TM International Logistics
Acquisitions
- February 2000 – Tetley Tea Company, $407 million
- March 2004 – Daewoo Commercial Vehicle Company, $102 million
- August 2004 – NatSteel's Steel business, $292 million
- November 2004 – Tyco Global Network, $130 million
- July 2005 – Teleglobe International Holdings, $239 million
- October 2005 – Good Earth Corporation
- December 2005 – Millennium Steel, Thailand, $165 million
- December 2005 – Brunner Mond Chemicals, $10 million
- June 2006 – Eight O'Clock Coffee, $220 million
- November 2006 – Ritz Carlton Boston, $170 million
- January 2007 – Corus Group, $12 billion
- March 2007 – PT Kaltim Prima Coal , $1.1 billion
- April 2007 – Campton Place Hotel, San Francisco, $60 million
- January 2008 – Imacid Chemical Company, Morocco
- February 2008 – General Chemical Industrial Products, $1 billion
- March 2008 – Jaguar Cars and Land Rover, $2.3 billion
- March 2008 – Serviplem SA, Spain
- April 2008 – Comoplesa Lebrero SA, Spain
- May 2008 – Piaggio Aero Industries S.p.A., Italy - Sold Off in 2015
- June 2008 – China Enterprise Communications, China
- October 2008 – Miljo Grenland / Innovasjon, Norway
- April 2010 – Hewitt Robins International, United Kingdom
- July 2013 – Alti SA, France
- December 2014 – Energy Products Limited, India
- June 2016 – Welspun Renewables Energy, India
- May 2018 – Bhushan Steel Limited, India
Philanthropy
- Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
- The Energy and Resources Institute, a non-governmental research institute
- The JRD Tata Ecotechnology Centre
- National Centre for Performing Arts
- Tata Center for Technology & Design at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Tata Centre for Technology & Design at IIT Bombay
- Tata Cricket Academy
- Tata Football Academy
- Tata Institute of Social Sciences
- Tata Management Training Centre
- Tata Medical Center, inaugurated on 16 May 2011 by Ratan Tata
- Tata Memorial Hospital
- Tata Cancer Hospital
- Tata Trusts, a group of philanthropic organisations run by the head of the business conglomerate Tata Sons
In 2010, Tata Group donated 2.20 billion to the Harvard Business School to build an academic and a residential building for executive education programmes on the institute's campus in Boston, Massachusetts. The building, now known as Tata Hall, is the largest endowment received by Harvard Business School from an international donor.
In 2017, Tata Consultancy Services donated an unprecedented $35 million grant to Carnegie Mellon University, the largest ever industry donation to the university, to collaborate on promoting next-generation technologies that will drive the Fourth Industrial Revolution, including cognitive systems and autonomous vehicles.
, the former chairman of Tata Group|alt=Ratan-Tata
In 2017, the Tata Football Academy won the bid to form the Jamshedpur FC, a football club based on Jamshedpur of Jharkhand in the 4th edition of the Indian Super League.
In 2020, Tata Group has donated 1500 crores to PM Cares Fund to fight against COVID-19 pandemic in India.
Controversies and criticisms
The Tata Group has also attracted some controversy during its more than 150 years in operation, notably:Munnar, Kerala
The Kerala Government filed an affidavit in the high court alleging that Tata Tea had "grabbed" forest land of at Munnar. The Tatas provided that they possessed of land, which they are allowed to retain under the Kannan Devan Hill Act, 1971, and there was a shortage of in that. The Chief Minister of Kerala V.S. Achuthanandan, who vowed to evict all on government land in Munnar, formed a special squad for the Munnar land takeover mission and started acquiring back properties. However, the mission was aborted due to both influential land-holders and opposition from Achuthanandan's own party.Kalinganagar, Orissa
On 2 January 2006, Kalinganagar, Tribal Orissa villagers protested the construction of a new steel plant for Tata Steel on land historically owned by them. Some of the villagers had been evicted without adequate relocation. Police retribution was brutal: 37 protesters were injured and 13 killed, including 3 women and a 13-year-old boy. One policeman was hacked to death by a mob, after police had opened fire on protestors with tear gas and rubber bullets. Family members of the deceased villagers later claimed that the bodies had been mutilated during post-mortem examination.Supplies to Burma's military regime
In December 2006, Myanmar's chief of general staff, General Thura Shwe Mann, visited the Tata Motors plant in Pune. In 2009, TATA Motors announced that it would manufacture trucks in Myanmar. Tata Motors reported that these contracts to supply hardware and automobiles to Burma's military were subsequently criticised by human rights activists.Singur land acquisition
The Singur controversy in West Bengal was a series of protests by locals and political parties over the forced acquisition, eviction, and inadequate compensation to those farmers displaced for the Tata Nano plant, during which Mamata Banerjee's party was widely criticised as acting for political gain. Despite the support of the Communist Party of India state government, Tata eventually pulled the project out of West Bengal, citing safety concerns. Narendra Modi, then Chief Minister of Gujarat, made land available for the Nano project.On Aug 31, 2016, in a historic judgement, the Honorable Supreme Court of India set aside the land acquisition by the West Bengal Government in 2006 that had facilitated Tata Motors' Nano plant, stating that the West Bengal government had not taken possession of the land legally, and were now required to repossess and return it to local farmers within 12 weeks without compensation.
Dhamra Port, Odisha
The Port of Dhamara has received significant coverage, sparking controversy in India, and in Tata's emerging global markets. The Dhamra port, an equal joint venture between Tata Steel and Larsen & Toubro, has been criticised for its proximity to the Gahirmatha Sanctuary and Bhitarkanika National Park by Indian and international organisations, including Greenpeace; Gahirmatha Beach is one of the world's largest mass nesting sites for the olive ridley turtle, and India's second largest mangrove forest, Bhitarkanika, is a designated Ramsar site, and critics claimed that the port could disrupt mass nesting at Gahirmtha beaches as well as the ecology of the Bitharkanika mangrove forest.TATA Steel employed mitigation measures set by the project's official advisor, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, and the company pledging to "adopt all its recommendations without exception" when conservation organisations asserted that a thorough environmental impact analysis had not been done for the project, which had undergone changes in size and specifications since it was first proposed.