KP Snacks

KP Snacks is a German-owned British producer of branded and own-label maize-, potato-, and nut-based snacks, "Choc Dips" and nuts. The KP stands for “Kenyon Produce”. The company is based in Slough, England, UK.

KP Snacks
Limited
IndustrySnacks, peanuts
Founded1853, nut production started in 1953
HeadquartersSlough, United Kingdom
ProductsNuts, potato crisps
OwnerIntersnack
Websitewww.kpsnacks.com

History

The company was founded in 1853 as Kenyon & Son as a producer of confectionery, jam and pickles. By 1891 the company had become Kenyon & Son and Craven Limited. The company switched to producing roasted and salted hazelnuts in 1948, expanding to peanuts later. These were originally produced for sale in cinemas. In 1952 the company introduced Hercules Nuts and in 1953 the No.1 KP Nuts peanut brand.

The company became part of United Biscuits (UB) in 1968. The KP Snacks subsidiary produces a range of packet snack brands including Hula Hoops, Skips, McCoy's, Frisps, Brannigan's, Royster's, Space Raiders, Nik Naks, Wheat Crunchies, Discos, and Phileas Fogg.[1] The snacks part is based on Teesside and in Rotherham, near the UB distribution warehouse.

The Ashby-de-la-Zouch site won a Best Factory Award in 2004.[2]

UB sold the company to the German company Intersnack in December 2012 for £500 million.[3]

Sourcing

As a group, they are the largest buyer of nuts in the world (as of 2019),[4] sourcing from nations in Asia, Africa, South America and Central America.[4]

They have various local aid and sustainability projects.[4]

Products

gollark: Doesn't work.
gollark: I have an environment table with new `fs` functions, and I want `loadfile` and `os.run` and whatever to use those.
gollark: Well, how am I supposed to make this work properly?
gollark: Er, no.
gollark: Why would you want to do that?

References

  1. "KP Snacks". Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  2. "Best Factory Awards".
  3. "KP Snacks snapped up by Intersnack in £500m deal". Manchester Evening News. 5 December 2012.
  4. "Sustainability". KP Nuts.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.