Early Light International (Holdings) Ltd.

private
Industry ODM, OEM
Founded 1972
Headquarters Early Light International Ctr,
9 Ka Fu Close,
Sheung Shui, Hong Kong
, China
Number of locations
Shenzhen, Shaoguan
Key people
Francis Choi Chee Ming, Carmen Choi[1]
Products Toys, consumer goods
Number of employees
80,000 (2008)[2]
Website Official site

Early Light International (Holdings) Ltd. (旭日國際控股有限公司), through its subsidiary Early Light Industrial Co., Limited 旭日實業有限公司, is the largest manufacturer of toys in the world and a significant player in the consumer products sector.[3] The company was founded by current CEO and chairman, Dr. Francis Choi.[4]

General history

Early Light Industrial Co., Limited is a toy manufacturer founded by current CEO and chairman, Dr. Francis Choi in 1972. Early Light International (Holdings) Limited is the holding company of Early Light Industrial and was founded in 1994.[5] The company is based in Sheung Shui, Hong Kong.

Early Light is a private company specialises as an original equipment manufacturer and original design manufacturer of toys and consumer products for nearly 40 years. Product lines manufactured include products marketed to adults and children and range from simple moulded figurines to highly sophisticated electronic robots. Headquartered in Hong Kong with manufacturing facilities situated in Shenzhen and Shaoguan, Early Light Industrial was one of the first to relocate manufacturing facilities across the border to China from Hong Kong in 1983, hiring 3000 workers. After hiring locally in an effort to employ relocated ethnic workers, Early Light Industrial employs more than 80,000 people working in Hong Kong and in its plants in neighbouring Guangdong.[6]

Since its inception, Early Light Industrial has developed relationships with major toy sellers such as Mattel, Lionel, and Hasbro,[7] and has grown to an organisation that employs over 70,000 employees during peak production periods in factories that total more than 20 million square feet. Stating a concern for the environment and sustainable manufacturing, Early Light Industrial contributes to local social causes, charitable organisations, and community organisations in addition to earning ISO certifications that highlight the company’s dedication to the future of manufacturing.[1]

Manufacturing facilities

History

In 1972, the first factory was located in the Kwun Tong industrial area of Hong Kong. In 1984, the Xinnán factory was opened across the border in Shenzhen, with 500 employees. In 1991, Woha factory of 800,000 square feet (74,000 m2) and 10,000 employees is opened in Shenzhen, Guangdong. In 1994, Renwu factory in Shenzhen; plant of 1,200,000 square feet (110,000 m2) and 12,000 employees. In 1997,establishes the 2,500,000 square feet (230,000 m2) Shanha factory in Shenzhen with 10,000 employees. These plants were certified ISO9001:2000 in 1999.

In 2006, opens 20,000,000 square feet (1,900,000 m2) factory located in Wujiang District of Shaoguan; plant employing 8,000 staff.

Today

Early Light Industrial Co., Limited operates two manufacturing facilities, one in Shenzhen and one in Shaoguan. Combined, these facilities cover an area of approximately 25 million square feet, and have the capacity to accommodate over 450 assembly lines and 70,000 skilled workers at their peak.[1] Early Light Industrial’s Shaoguan factory, located in Wujiang District, employs some 20,000 workers.[8] In 2010, its plants are awarded ISO9001:2008.[9]

In addition to in-house capacity, Early Light Industrial solicited contractors to produce more than 40% of its products, as at 2006. To better control manufacturing process and quality, Early Light Industrial has progressively reduced its dependence on sub-contractors to less than 25%. The company declared that it intends to eliminate the need for sub contractors altogether and handle all of its production in house, under one roof.[2]

2007 Mattel recall

In 2007, toy cars supplied to Mattel by Early Light were subject to a HK$1 million product recall when they were found to contain lead. It was subsequently discovered that the source of lead was the unauthorised paint used by one of its subcontractors. An Early Light spokesman said at the time: "We discovered [the subcontractor] didn't turn up to fetch the paint in April and May, so we did a lab test on the toy cars. We reported to Mattel when we saw there were problems." Mattel absolved Early Light from blame caused by the substitution of dangerous paint by the subcontractor, Hong Li Da.[2]

Staff relations

According to the company, Early Light Industrial ensures the welfare of its employees by managing factories in compliance with the CARE process of the International Council of Toy Industries (ICTI); it contributes to local relief funds during times of crisis and research and social development foundations.[10] Nevertheless, the company's Shaoguan factory became the focus of world attention when it was the centre of a factory brawl which, according to official sources, killed 2 and injured 118 people, most of which Uyghurs, and which has been widely cited as the incident which resulted in street protests, and subsequently riots, in the Xinjiang capital of Ürümqi in July 2009.[11][12] The factory, located in Wujiang District, employs some 16,000 workers.[13] At the behest of the Guangdong authorities, it hired 800 workers from Kashgar,[14] as part of an ethnic program which relocated 200,000 young Uyghurs since the start of 2008.[15]

In a report about the company's Shenzhen factory in 2008, China Labor Watch alleged that workers at the Shaoguan factory, where the Uyghurs were employed, earned 28 yuan per day compared with 41.3 yuan in its factory in Shenzhen.[16] Li Qiang, the executive director of China Labor Watch said the low pay, long hours and poor working conditions combined with the inability of Uyghur workers to communicate with their Han colleagues exacerbated deeply held mistrust between the groups, and sparked the deadly brawl in June 2009.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "About Us". Early Light Industrial Co. Ltd. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 Chen, Shu-Ching Jean (28 January 2008). "Cover Story: Choi's Toys". Forbes.
  3. 1 2 Jacobs, Andrew (15 July 2009). "At a Factory, the Spark for China’s Violence". The New York Times. Pg 2
  4. "Early Light International (Holdings) Limited - Chee Ming Choi GBS, JP". Bloomberg Businessweek.
  5. Bloomberg Businessweek (29 May 2011). Early Light International (Holdings) Limited - Company overview
  6. "Choi’s Toys". Forbes.
  7. Partners, Early Light Industrial Co., Ltd.
  8. "Shaoguan Site". Early Light Industrial Co., Ltd.. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
  9. "Milestones". Early Light Industrial Co., Ltd. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
  10. "Research and Development". Early Light Industrial Co., Ltd..
  11. Wong, Edward (5 July 2009). "Riots in Western China Amid Ethnic Tension". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 July 2009.
  12. Reuters (5 July 2009). "China calls Xinjiang riot a plot against its rule".
  13. Zhai, Ivan (13 September 2009). "Out of harm's way, but far from normality". South China Morning Post. p. A6.
  14. staff reporters (8 July 2009). "Guangdong police detain 12 suspects over factory brawl". South China Morning Post. p. A4.
  15. Watts, Jonathan (10 July 2009). "Old suspicions magnified mistrust into ethnic riots in Urumqi". The Guardian (London).
  16. Reuters (6 July 2009). "Labor Violations Exacerbate Ethnic Tensions in South China".

The Forbes Cover/Top Stories Choi's Toys

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, August 04, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.