There are 16 Economic Activities in all levels that containg the word "MAKING" in their name or detailed description. Have you that what you are searching for?
- Class 0910
Support activities for petroleum and natural gas extraction
This class includes:
~ oil and gas extraction service activities provided on a fee or contract basis:
~ exploration services in connection with petroleum or gas extraction, e.g. traditional prospecting methods, such as MAKING geological observations at prospective sites
~ directional drilling and redrilling; spudding in; derrick erection in situ, repairing and dismantling; cementing oil and gas well casings; pumping of wells; plugging and abandoning wells etc.
~ liquefaction and regasification of natural gas for purpose of transport, done at the mine site
~ draining and pumping services, on a fee or contract basis
~ test drilling in connection with petroleum or gas extraction
This class also includes:
~ oil and gas field fire fighting services
- Class 0990
Support activities for other mining and quarrying
This class includes:
~ support services on a fee or contract basis, required for mining activities of divisions 05, 07 and 08
~ exploration services, e.g. traditional prospecting methods, such as taking core samples and MAKING geological observations at prospective sites
~ draining and pumping services, on a fee or contract basis
~ test drilling and test hole boring
- Class 1621
Manufacture of veneer sheets and wood-based panels
This class includes:
~ manufacture of veneer sheets thin enough to be used for veneering, MAKING plywood or other purposes:
~ smoothed, dyed, coated, impregnated, reinforced (with paper or fabric backing)
~ made in the form of motifs
~ manufacture of plywood, veneer panels and similar laminated wood boards and sheets
~ manufacture of particle board and fibreboard
~ manufacture of densified wood
~ manufacture of glue laminated wood, laminated veneer wood
- Class 1812
Service activities related to printing
This class includes:
~ binding of printed sheets, e.g. into books, brochures, magazines, catalogues etc., by folding, assembling, stitching, glueing, collating, basting, adhesive binding, trimming, gold stamping
~ composition, typesetting, phototypesetting, pre-press data input including scanning and optical character recognition, electronic make-up
~ plate MAKING,services including imagesetting and plate-setting (for the printing processes letterpress and offset)
~ engraving or etching of cylinders for gravure
~ plate processes direct to plate (also photopolymer plates)
~ preparation of plates and dies for relief stamping or printing
~ production of proofs
~ artistic work including preparation of litho stones and prepared woodblocks
~ production of reprographic products
~ design of printing products e.g. sketches, layouts, dummies etc.
~ other graphic activities such as die-sinking or die-stamping, Braille copying, punching and drilling, embossing, varnishing and laminating, collating and insetting, creasing
- Class 2825
Manufacture of machinery for food, beverage and tobacco processing
This class includes:
~ manufacture of agricultural dryers
~ manufacture of machinery for the dairy industry:
~ cream separators
~ milk processing machinery (e.g. homogenizers)
~ milk converting machinery (e.g. butter chums, butter workers and moulding machines)
~ cheese MAKING,machines (e.g. homogenizers, moulders, presses) etc.
~ manufacture of machinery for the grain milling industry:
~ machinery to clean, sort or grade seeds, grain or dried leguminous vegetables (winnowers, sieving belts, separators, grain brushing machines etc.)
~ machinery to produce flour and meal etc. (grinding mills, feeders, sifters, bran cleaners, blenders, rice hullers, pea splitters)
~ manufacture of presses, crushers etc. used to make wine, cider, fruit juices etc.
~ manufacture of machinery for the bakery industry or for MAKING macaroni, spaghetti or similar products:
~ bakery ovens, dough mixers, dough-dividers, moulders, slicers, cake depositing machines etc.
~ manufacture of machines and equipment to process diverse foods:
~ machinery to make confectionery, cocoa or chocolate; to manufacture sugar; for breweries; to process meat or poultry; to prepare fruit, nuts or vegetables; to prepare fish, shellfish or other seafood
~ machinery for filtering and purifying
~ other machinery for the industrial preparation or manufacture of food or drink
~ manufacture of machinery for the extraction or preparation of animal or vegetable fats or oils
~ manufacture of machinery for the preparation of tobacco and for the MAKING of cigarettes or cigars, or for pipe or chewing tobacco or snuff
~ manufacture of machinery for the preparation of food in hotels and restaurants
- Class 2826
Manufacture of machinery for textile, apparel and leather production
This class includes:
~ manufacture of textile machinery:
~ machines for preparing, producing, extruding, drawing, texturing or cutting man-made textile fibres, materials or yarns
~ machines for preparing textile fibres: cotton gins, bale breakers, garnetters, cotton spreaders, wool scourers, wool carbonizers, combs, carders, roving frames etc.
~ spinning machines
~ machines for preparing textile yarns: reelers, warpers and related machines
~ weaving machines (looms), including hand looms
~ knitting machines
~ machines for MAKING knotted net, tulle, lace, braid etc.
~ manufacture of auxiliary machines or equipment for textile machinery:
~ dobbies, jacquards, automatic stop motions, shuttle changing mechanisms, spindles and spindle flyers etc.
~ manufacture of textile printing machinery
~ manufacture of machinery for fabric processing:
~ machinery for washing, bleaching, dyeing, dressing, finishing, coating or impregnating textile fabrics
~ manufacture of machines for reeling, unreeling, folding, cutting or pinking textile fabrics
~ manufacture of laundry machinery:
~ ironing machines, including fusing presses
~ commercial washing and drying machines
~ dry-cleaning machines
~ manufacture of sewing machines, sewing machine heads and sewing machine needles (whether or not for household use)
~ manufacture of machines for producing or finishing felt or non-wovens
~ manufacture of leather machines:
~ machinery for preparing, tanning or working hides, skins or leather
~ machinery for MAKING or repairing footwear or other articles of hides, skins, leather or fur skins
- Class 6492
Other credit granting
This class includes:
~ financial service activities primarily concerned with MAKING loans by institutions not involved in monetary intermediation, where the granting of credit can take a variety of forms, such as loans, mortgages, credit cards etc., providing the following types of services:
~ granting of consumer credit
~ international trade financing
~ provision of long-term finance to industry by industrial banks
~ money lending outside the banking system
~ credit granting for house purchase by specialized non-depository institutions
~ pawnshops and pawnbrokers
- Class 2829
Manufacture of other special-purpose machinery
This class includes the manufacture of special-purpose machinery not elsewhere classified.
This class includes:
~ manufacture of machinery for MAKING paper pulp
~ manufacture of paper and paperboard MAKING machinery
~ manufacture of dryers for wood, paper pulp, paper or paperboard
~ manufacture of machinery producing articles of paper or paperboard
~ manufacture of machinery for working soft rubber or plastics or for the manufacture of products of these materials:
~ extruders, moulders, pneumatic tyre MAKING or retreading machines and other machines for MAKING a specific rubber or plastic product
~ manufacture of printing and bookbinding machines and machines for activities supporting printing on a variety of materials
~ manufacture of machinery for producing tiles, bricks, shaped ceramic pastes, pipes, graphite electrodes, blackboard chalk, foundry moulds etc.
~ manufacture of semi-conductor manufacturing machinery
~ manufacture of industrial robots performing multiple tasks for special purposes
~ manufacture of diverse special-purpose machinery and equipment:
~ machines to assemble electric or electronic lamps, tubes (valves) or bulbs
~ machines for production or hot-working of glass or glassware, glass fibre or yarn
~ machinery or apparatus for isotopic separation
~ manufacture of tire alignment and balancing equipment; balancing equipment (except wheel balancing)
~ manufacture of central greasing systems
~ manufacture of aircraft launching gear, aircraft carrier catapults and related equipment
~ manufacture of automatic bowling alley equipment (e.g. pin-setters)
~ manufacture of roundabouts, swings, shooting galleries and other fairground amusements
- Class 6499
Other financial service activities, except insurance and pension funding activities, n.e.c.
This class includes:
~ other financial service activities primarily concerned with distributing funds other than by MAKING loans:
~ factoring activities
~ writing of swaps, options and other hedging arrangements
~ activities of viatical settlement companies
~ own-account investment activities, such as by venture capital companies, investment clubs etc.
- Class 7010
Activities of head offices
This class includes the overseeing and managing of other units of the company or enterprise; undertaking the strategic or organizational planning and decision MAKING role of the company or enterprise; exercising operational control and manage the day-to-day operations of their related units.
This class includes activities of:
~ head offices
~ centralized administrative offices
~ corporate offices
~ district and regional offices
~ subsidiary management offices
- Group 181
Printing and service activities related to printing
This group includes printing of products, such as newspapers, books, periodicals, business forms, greeting cards, and other materials, and associated support activities, such as bookbinding, plate MAKING,services, and data imaging. Printing can be done using various techniques and on different materials.
- Division 09
Mining support service activities
This division includes specialized support services incidental to mining provided on a fee or contract basis. It includes exploration services through traditional prospecting methods such as taking core samples and MAKING geological observations as well as drilling, test-drilling or redrilling for oil wells, metallic and non-metallic minerals. Other typical services cover building oil and gas well foundations, cementing oil and gas well casings, cleaning, bailing and swabbing oil and gas wells, draining and pumping mines, overburden removal services at mines, etc.
- Division 18
Printing and reproduction of recorded media
This division includes printing of products, such as newspapers, books, periodicals, business forms, greeting cards, and other materials, and associated support activities, such as bookbinding, plate MAKING,services, and data imaging. The support activities included here are an integral part of the printing industry, and a product (a printing plate, a bound book, or a computer disk or file) that is an integral part of the printing industry is almost always provided by these operations.
Processes used in printing include a variety of methods for transferring an image from a plate, screen, or computer file to a medium, such as paper, plastics, metal, textile articles, or wood. The most prominent of these methods entails the transfer of the image from a plate or screen to the medium through lithographic, gravure, screen or flexographic printing. Often a computer file is used to directly ''drive'' the printing mechanism to create the image or electrostatic and other types of equipment (digital or non-impact printing).
Though printing and publishing can be carried out by the same unit (a newspaper, for example), it is less and less the case that these distinct activities are carried out in the same physical location.
This division also includes the reproduction of recorded media, such as compact discs, video recordings, software on discs or tapes, records etc.
This division excludes publishing activities (see section J).
- Division 58
Publishing activities
This division includes the publishing of books, brochures, leaflets, dictionaries, encyclopaedias, atlases, maps and charts; publishing of newspapers, journals and periodicals; directory and mailing list and other publishing, as well as software publishing.
Publishing includes the acquisition of copyrights to content (information products) and MAKING this content available to the general public by engaging in (or arranging for) the reproduction and distribution of this content in various forms. All the feasible forms of publishing (in print, electronic or audio form, on the Internet, as multimedia products such as CD-ROM reference books etc.), except publishing of motion pictures, are included in this division.
This division excludes the publishing of motion pictures, video tapes and movies on DVD or similar media (division 59) and the production of master copies for records or audio material (division 59). Also excluded are printing (see 1811) and the mass reproduction of recorded media (see 1820).
- Section C
Manufacturing
This section includes the physical or chemical transformation of materials, substances, or components into new products, although this cannot be used as the single universal criterion for defining manufacturing (see remark on processing of waste below). The materials, substances, or components transformed are raw materials that are products of agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining or quarrying as well as products of other manufacturing activities. Substantial alteration, renovation or reconstruction of goods is generally considered to be manufacturing.
Units engaged in manufacturing are often described as plants, factories or mills and characteristically use power-driven machines and materials-handling equipment. However, units that transform materials or substances into new products by hand or in the worker's home and those engaged in selling to the general public of products made on the same premises from which they are sold, such as bakeries and custom tailors, are also included in this section. Manufacturing units may process materials or may contract with other units to process their materials for them. Both types of units are included in manufacturing.
The output of a manufacturing process may be finished in the sense that it is ready for utilization or consumption, or it may be semi-finished in the sense that it is to become an input for further manufacturing. For example, the output of alumina refining is the input used in the primary production of aluminium; primary aluminium is the input to aluminium wire drawing; and aluminium wire is the input for the manufacture of fabricated wire products.
Manufacture of specialized components and parts of, and accessories and attachments to, machinery and equipment is, as a general rule, classified in the same class as the manufacture of the machinery and equipment for which the parts and accessories are intended. Manufacture of unspecialized components and parts of machinery and equipment, e.g. engines, pistons, electric motors, electrical assemblies, valves, gears, roller bearings, is classified in the appropriate class of manufacturing, without regard to the machinery and equipment in which these items may be included. However, MAKING specialized components and accessories by moulding or extruding plastics materials is included in class 2220.
Assembly of the component parts of manufactured products is considered manufacturing. This includes the assembly of manufactured products from either self-produced or purchased components.
The recovery of waste, i.e. the processing of waste into secondary raw materials is classified in class 3830 (Materials recovery). While this may involve physical or chemical transformations, this is not considered to be a part of manufacturing. The primary purpose of these activities is considered to be the treatment or processing of waste and they are therefore classified in Section E (Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities). However, the manufacture of new final products (as opposed to secondary raw materials) is classified in manufacturing, even if these processes use waste as an input. For example, the production of silver from film waste is considered to be a manufacturing process.
Specialized maintenance and repair of industrial, commercial and similar machinery and equipment is, in general, classified in division 33 (Repair, maintenance and installation of machinery and equipment). However, the repair of computers and personal and household goods is classified in division 95 (Repair of computers and personal and household goods), while the repair of motor vehicles is classified in division 45 (Wholesale and retail trade and repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles).
The installation of machinery and equipment, when carried out as a specialized activity, is classified in 3320.
Remark: The boundaries of manufacturing and the other sectors of the classification system can be somewhat blurry.
- Section J
Information and communication
This section includes the production and distribution of information and cultural products, the provision of the means to transmit or distribute these products, as well as data or communications, information technology activities and the processing of data and other information service activities.
The main components of this section are publishing activities (division 58), including software publishing, motion picture and sound recording activities (division 59), radio and TV broadcasting and programming activities (division 60), telecommunications activities (division 61) and information technology activities (division 62) and other information service activities (division 63).
Publishing includes the acquisition of copyrights to content (information products) and MAKING this content available to the general public by engaging in (or arranging for) the reproduction and distribution of this content in various forms. All the feasible forms of publishing (in print, electronic or audio form, on the internet, as multimedia products such as CD-ROM reference books etc.) are included in this section.
Activities related to production and distribution of TV programming span divisions 59, 60 and 61, reflecting different stages in this process. Individual components, such as movies, television series etc. are produced by activities in division 59, while the creation of a complete television channel programme, from components produced in division 59 or other components (such as live news programming) is included in division 60. Division 60 also includes the broadcasting of this programme by the producer. The distribution of the complete television programme by third parties, i.e. without any alteration of the content, is included in division 61. This distribution in division 61 can be done through broadcasting, satellite or cable systems.