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About Daikin Middle East & Africa Leading in Innovation and Quality About Daikin Middle East & Africa Incorporated on March 2006, Daikin Middle East & Africa is the Regional Sales office, responsible for promoting, selling & After Market Service & Support for all Air Conditioning products, covering United Arab Emirates, GCC, Middle East & Africa. About Daikin Air Conditioning Saudi Arabia Aiming to be present Locally, Daikin had established our local office in Saudi Arabia: Daikin Air Conditioning Saudi Arabia, incorporated December 2013, located in Riyadh, with around 70 Employees, showroom, Service & parts Center & Training center.Daikin UK is a market leader in environmentally responsible renewable energy heat pumps, ventilation and air conditioning systems. We provide energy efficient integrated climate control solutions for applications in domestic, commercial and industrial buildings. Our national network of regional teams partner with corporate clients, developers, specifiers and trade suppliers to provide our innovative and cost effective HVAC solutions.

We aim to offer the very highest standard of aftersales services including warranty, maintenance and troubleshooting.A Japanese maker of air conditioners said it would build a $410 million factory near Houston, in a bet that energy-efficient Japanese-style units can take share from American designs. said the factory, set to start operating in early 2016, would expand the capacity of its U.S. subsidiary, Goodman Global, and serve as a hub for Osaka-based Daikin to try to spread the technology it sells at home.
nicor gas air duct cleaningAs it opens the new site, in Hockley, Texas, Goodman plans to close other sites in Texas and Tennessee.
edenpure area model air purifier reviewsWhile Daikin plans no layoffs, about 3,000 employees in Texas and 1,000 in Tennessee will be asked to relocate, and there will be no net addition of jobs, the company said.
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“The current Goodman facilities don’t have capacity to assemble all the value-added models that Daikin is selling elsewhere,” Takeshi Ebisu, chief executive of Goodman, said in an interview. Mr. Ebisu said the new 90-acre Texas factory will reduce manufacturing costs and allow faster customization for U.S. consumers. In the U.S., where air conditioning was invented and popularized, many systems today are old-fashioned, electricity-gulping designs, in Daikin’s view. U.S. air-conditioning systems—both commercial and residential—tend to chill air or water in a central unit installed outdoors. The air or water is then moved around to cool individual rooms or areas. Air conditioners from Daikin and other Asian makers deliver chilled chemical refrigerant from a central condenser, also generally installed outdoors, to individual units in separate parts of buildings, where the air is then cooled. Advocates of the Japanese technology say it provides substantial energy savings and greater temperature control.

Among other advantages, heat from the air-conditioning process can be recycled—which is useful in spring or fall, when one side of a building can be too cool and the other too hot. The Japanese-style systems could generate energy savings of as much as 34% over conventional U.S. air conditioning, according to a December 2012 study by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Potential downsides cited by critics include the possible need for separate ductwork to bring in outside air for ventilation, which the Japanese systems do not do, though the need for this can vary based on regulations. Daikin’s products also may cost more to install—especially in U.S. buildings fitted for traditional cooling systems. The recent decline in energy prices, though, may limit interest in conservation among building owners. In 2012, Daikin bought Goodman for $3.7 billion from Hellman & Friedman LLC, a private-equity firm, in a deal that vaulted it into the top tier in the U.S., alongside companies such as Ingersoll-Rand%

PLC’s Trane unit and Carrier Corp. During the fiscal year ended in March, Daikin generated sales of $3.63 billion in the U.S. The company estimates $16 billion of air-conditioning equipment is sold in the U.S. annually, one-fifth of the global total. The 90-year-old Daikin has long had a significant presence in Japan, China and Europe. So far, U.S. interest is low, with industry data showing well below 10% of commercial units in the U.S. using Daikin’s “variable refrigerant volume,” or VRV, technology, or comparable systems from other manufacturers. “The biggest challenge for us is to raise awareness,’’ said Mr. Ebisu, who has been leading Goodman since last May. In addition to increasing use in commercial buildings, Daikin wants to sell more premium systems to residential users in the U.S., where Goodman has focused on the lower end of the market, Mr. Ebisu said Daikin has begun airing TV commercials aimed at consumers, an unusual strategy for the industry. In the U.S., most air-conditioning systems are sold via contractors or dealers, rather than directly to home or building owners, a more common approach in Japan.

The company is also inviting distributors to Goodman’s headquarters in Texas for training.Mr. Ebisu said a major reason for the purchase of Goodman was to obtain the company’s sales network, which does business with more than 60% of contractors and dealers in the U.S. “Most building owners look at price when installing air conditioning,” said Don Emanuel, a contractor in New York City, who recently installed a VRV system in a prewar apartment complex on Park Avenue when it was renovated. “However, when the advantages of VRV are explained to them, most of them change their minds because of the saving and versatility.” Benjamin Freas, an analyst at Navigant Research, said Daikin could struggle to stand out. U.S. makers such as Trane and Carrier, as well as South Korean giants Samsung Electronics and LG, have begun making Japanese-style systems. Daikin already faces challenges from other Japanese makers. For more than 80 years, Daikin® has been manufacturing and supplying advanced, high-quality air-conditioning equipment for residential and commercial applications around the world.