There are 18 Economic Activities in all levels that containg the word "PLANTS" in their name or detailed description. Have you that what you are searching for?
- Class 0128
Growing of spices, aromatic, drug and pharmaceutical crops
This class includes:
~ growing of perennial and non-perennial spices and aromatic crops:
~ pepper (piper spp.)
~ chilies and peppers (capsicum spp.)
~ nutmeg, mace and cardamoms
~ anise, badian and fennel
~ cinnamon (canella)
~ cloves
~ ginger
~ vanilla
~ hops
~ other spices and aromatic crops
~ growing of drug and narcotic crops
~ growing of PLANTS used primarily in perfumery, in pharmacy or for insecticidal, fungicidal or similar purposes
- Class 0130
Plant propagation
This class includes the production of all vegetative planting materials including cuttings, suckers and seedlings for direct plant propagation or to create plant grafting stock into which selected scion is grafted for eventual planting to produce crops.
This class includes:
~ growing of PLANTS for planting
~ growing of PLANTS for ornamental purposes, including turf for transplanting
~ growing of live PLANTS for bulbs, tubers and roots; cuttings and slips; mushroom spawn
~ operation of tree nurseries, except forest tree nurseries
- Class 0230
Gathering of non-wood forest products
This class includes the gathering of non-wood forest products and other PLANTS growing in the wild.
This class includes:
~ gathering of wild growing materials:
~ mushrooms, truffles
~ berries
~ nuts
~ balata and other rubber-like gums
~ cork
~ lac and resins
~ balsams
~ vegetable hair
~ eelgrass
~ acorns, horse chestnuts
~ mosses and lichens
- Class 3900
Remediation activities and other waste management services
This class includes:
~ decontamination of soils and groundwater at the place of pollution, either in situ or ex situ, using e.g. mechanical, chemical or biological methods
~ decontamination of industrial PLANTS or sites, including nuclear PLANTS and sites
~ decontamination and cleaning up of surface water following accidental pollution, e.g. through collection of pollutants or through application of chemicals
~ cleaning up of oil spills and other pollutions on land, in surface water, in ocean and seas, including coastal areas
~ asbestos, lead paint, and other toxic material abatement
~ clearing of landmines and the like (including detonation)
~ other specialized pollution-control activities
- Class 4100
Construction of buildings
This class includes the construction of complete residential or non-residential buildings, on own account for sale or on a fee or contract basis. Outsourcing parts or even the whole construction process is possible. If only specialized parts of the construction process are carried out, the activity is classified in division 43.
This class includes:
~ construction of all types of residential buildings:
~ single-family houses
~ multi-family buildings, including high-rise buildings
~ construction of all types of non-residential buildings:
~ buildings for industrial production, e.g. factories, workshops, assembly PLANTS etc.
~ hospitals, schools, office buildings
~ hotels, stores, shopping malls, restaurants
~ airport buildings
~ indoor sports facilities
~ parking garages, including underground parking garages
~ warehouses
~ religious buildings
~ assembly and erection of prefabricated constructions on the site
This class also includes:
~ remodeling or renovating existing residential structures
- Class 4773
Other retail sale of new goods in specialized stores
This class includes:
~ retail sale of photographic, optical and precision equipment
~ activities of opticians
~ retail sale of watches, clocks and jewellery
~ retail sale of flowers, PLANTS, seeds, fertilizers, pet animals and pet food
~ retail sale of souvenirs, craftwork and religious articles
~ activities of commercial art galleries
~ retail sale of household fuel oil, bottled gas, coal and fuel wood
~ retail sale of cleaning materials
~ retail sale of weapons and ammunition
~ retail sale of stamps and coins
~ retail sale of non-food products n.e.c.
- Class 7120
Technical testing and analysis
This class includes:
~ performance of physical, chemical and other analytical testing of all types of materials and products (see below for exceptions):
~ acoustics and vibration testing
~ testing of composition and purity of minerals etc.
~ testing activities in the field of food hygiene, including veterinary testing and control in relation to food production
~ testing of physical characteristics and performance of materials, such as strength, thickness, durability, radioactivity etc.
~ qualification and reliability testing
~ performance testing of complete machinery: motors, automobiles, electronic equipment etc.
~ radiographic testing of welds and joints
~ failure analysis
~ testing and measuring of environmental indicators: air and water pollution etc.
~ certification of products, including consumer goods, motor vehicles, aircraft, pressurized containers, nuclear PLANTS etc.
~ periodic road-safety testing of motor vehicles
~ testing with use of models or mock-ups (e.g. of aircraft, ships, dams etc.)
~ operation of police laboratories
- Class 8130
Landscape care and maintenance service activities
This class includes:
~ planting, care and maintenance of:
~ parks and gardens for:
~~ private and public housing
~~ public and semi-public buildings (schools, hospitals, administrative buildings, church buildings etc.)
~~ municipal grounds (parks, green areas, cemeteries etc.)
~~ highway greenery (roads, train lines and tramlines, waterways, ports)
~~ industrial and commercial buildings
~ greenery for:
~~ buildings (roof gardens, façade greenery, indoor gardens)
~~ sports grounds (e.g. football fields, golf courses etc.), play grounds, lawns for sunbathing and other recreational parks
~~ stationary and flowing water (basins, alternating wet areas, ponds, swimming pools, ditches, watercourses, plant sewage systems)
~ PLANTS for protection against noise, wind, erosion, visibility and dazzling
This class also includes:
~ maintenance of land in order to keep it in good ecological condition
- Group 011
Growing of non-perennial crops
This group includes the growing of non-perennial crops, i.e. PLANTS that do not last for more than two growing seasons. Included is the growing of these PLANTS for the purpose of seed production.
- Group 012
Growing of perennial crops
This group includes the growing of perennial crops, i.e. PLANTS that lasts for more than two growing seasons, either dying back after each season or growing continuously. Included is the growing of these PLANTS for the purpose of seed production.
- Group 031
Fishing
This group includes capture fishery, i.e. the hunting, collecting and gathering activities directed at removing or collecting live wild aquatic organisms (predominantly fish, molluscs and crustaceans) including PLANTS from the oceanic, coastal or inland waters for human consumption and other purposes by hand or more usually by various types of fishing gear such as nets, lines and stationary traps. Such activities can be conducted on the intertidal shoreline (e.g. collection of molluscs such as mussels and oysters) or shore based netting, or from home-made dugouts or more commonly using commercially made boats in inshore, coastal waters or offshore waters. Unlike in aquaculture (group 032), the aquatic resource being captured is usually common property resource irrespective of whether the harvest from this resource is undertaken with or without exploitation rights. Such activities also include fishing restocked water bodies.
- Group 032
Aquaculture
This group includes aquaculture (or aquafarming), i.e. the production process involving the culturing or farming (including harvesting) of aquatic organisms (fish, molluscs, crustaceans, PLANTS, crocodiles, alligators and amphibians) using techniques designed to increase the production of the organisms in question beyond the natural capacity of the environment (for example regular stocking, feeding and protection from predators).
Culturing/farming refers to the rearing up to their juvenile and/or adult phase under captive conditions of the above organisms. In addition, aquaculture also encompasses individual, corporate or state ownership of the individual organisms throughout the rearing or culture stage, up to and including harvesting.
- Division 03
Fishing and aquaculture
This division includes capture fishery and aquaculture, covering the use of fishery resources from marine, brackish or freshwater environments, with the goal of capturing or gathering fish, crustaceans, molluscs and other marine organisms and products (e.g. aquatic PLANTS, pearls, sponges etc).
Also included are activities that are normally integrated in the process of production for own account (e.g. seeding oysters for pearl production).
This division does not include building and repairing of ships and boats (3011, 3315) and sport or recreational fishing activities (9319). Processing of fish, crustaceans or molluscs is excluded, whether at land-based PLANTS or on factory ships (1020).
- Division 46
Wholesale trade, except of motor vehicles and motorcycles
This division includes wholesale trade on own account or on a fee or contract basis (commission trade) related to domestic wholesale trade as well as international wholesale trade (import/export).
Wholesale is the resale (sale without transformation) of new and used goods to retailers, business-to-business trade, such as to industrial, commercial, institutional or professional users, or resale to other wholesalers, or involves acting as an agent or broker in buying goods for, or selling goods to, such persons or companies. The principal types of businesses included are merchant wholesalers, i.e. wholesalers who take title to the goods they sell, such as wholesale merchants or jobbers, industrial distributors, exporters, importers, and cooperative buying associations, sales branches and sales offices (but not retail stores) that are maintained by manufacturing or mining units apart from their PLANTS or mines for the purpose of marketing their products and that do not merely take orders to be filled by direct shipments from the PLANTS or mines. Also included are merchandise brokers, commission merchants and agents and assemblers, buyers and cooperative associations engaged in the marketing of farm products.
Wholesalers frequently physically assemble, sort and grade goods in large lots, break bulk, repack and redistribute in smaller lots, for example pharmaceuticals; store, refrigerate, deliver and install goods, engage in sales promotion for their customers and label design.
This division excludes the wholesale of motor vehicles, caravans and motorcycles, as well as motor vehicle accessories (see division 45), the renting and leasing of goods (see division 77) and the packing of solid goods and bottling of liquid or gaseous goods, including blending and filtering, for third parties (see class 8292).
- Section A
Agriculture, forestry and fishing
This section includes the exploitation of vegetal and animal natural resources, comprising the activities of growing of crops, raising and breeding of animals, harvesting of timber and other PLANTS, animals or animal products from a farm or their natural habitats.
- 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 F
Construction
This section includes general construction and specialized construction activities for buildings and civil engineering works. It includes new work, repair, additions and alterations, the erection of prefabricated buildings or structures on the site and also construction of a temporary nature.
General construction is the construction of entire dwellings, office buildings, stores and other public and utility buildings, farm buildings etc., or the construction of civil engineering works such as motorways, streets, bridges, tunnels, railways, airfields, harbours and other water projects, irrigation systems, sewerage systems, industrial facilities, pipelines and electric lines, sports facilities etc.
This work can be carried out on own account or on a fee or contract basis. Portions of the work and sometimes even the whole practical work can be subcontracted out. A unit that carries the overall responsibility for a construction project is classified here.
Also included is the repair of buildings and engineering works.
This section includes the complete construction of buildings (division 41), the complete construction of civil engineering works (division 42), as well as specialized construction activities, if carried out only as a part of the construction process (division 43).
The renting of construction equipment with operator is classified with the specific construction activity carried out with this equipment.
This section also includes the development of building projects for buildings or civil engineering works by bringing together financial, technical and physical means to realize the construction projects for later sale. If these activities are carried out not for later sale of the construction projects, but for their operation (e.g. renting of space in these buildings, manufacturing activities in these plants), the unit would not be classified here, but according to its operational activity, i.e. real estate, manufacturing etc.
- Section G
Wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles
This section includes wholesale and retail sale (i.e. sale without transformation) of any type of goods and the rendering of services incidental to the sale of these goods. Wholesaling and retailing are the final steps in the distribution of goods. Goods bought and sold are also referred to as merchandise.
Also included in this section are the repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles.
Sale without transformation is considered to include the usual operations (or manipulations) associated with trade, for example sorting, grading and assembling of goods, mixing (blending) of goods (for example sand), bottling (with or without preceding bottle cleaning), packing, breaking bulk and repacking for distribution in smaller lots, storage (whether or not frozen or chilled), cleaning and drying of agricultural products, cutting out of wood fibreboards or metal sheets as secondary activities.
Division 45 includes all activities related to the sale and repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles, while divisions 46 and 47 include all other sale activities. The distinction between division 46 (wholesale) and division 47 (retail sale) is based on the predominant type of customer.
Wholesale is the resale (sale without transformation) of new and used goods to retailers, to industrial, commercial, institutional or professional users, or to other wholesalers, or involves acting as an agent or broker in buying goods for, or selling goods to, such persons or companies. The principal types of businesses included are merchant wholesalers, i.e. wholesalers who take title to the goods they sell, such as wholesale merchants or jobbers, industrial distributors, exporters, importers, and cooperative buying associations, sales branches and sales offices (but not retail stores) that are maintained by manufacturing or mining units apart from their PLANTS or mines for the purpose of marketing their products and that do not merely take orders to be filled by direct shipments from the PLANTS or mines. Also included are merchandise brokers, commission merchants and agents and assemblers, buyers and cooperative associations engaged in the marketing of farm products. Wholesalers frequently physically assemble, sort and grade goods in large lots, break bulk, repack and redistribute in smaller lots, for example pharmaceuticals; store, refrigerate, deliver and install goods, engage in sales promotion for their customers and label design.
Retailing is the resale (sale without transformation) of new and used goods mainly to the general public for personal or household consumption or utilization, by shops, department stores, stalls, mail-order houses, door-to-door sales persons, hawkers and peddlers, consumer cooperatives, auction houses etc. Most retailers take title to the goods they sell, but some act as agents for a principal and sell either on consignment or on a commission basis.