Prize for Germany’s Best Trainee Tanner
by Samiksha
Cologne – Felix Wengenroth,
employee of specialty chemicals company LANXESS, will receive the “Förderpreis”
from Verein für Gerberei-Chemie und -Technik e.V. (Association for Tannery
Chemistry and Technology), in recognition of young scientists and engineers.
Wengenroth will be awarded in the field of tannery technology at a conference
of the International Union of Leather Technologists and Chemists Societies
(IULTCS) in Dresden, Germany, from June 25 to 28, 2019. He was Germany’s best
graduate, scoring 95 out of 100 points in his final exam with the German
Chambers of Commerce and Industry.
At the end of 2017, Wengenroth completed three years of
apprenticeship training in the Leather business unit at LANXESS to become a
qualified leather manufacturer and tanning technologist. At the same time, he
continued his studies in economics and graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in
February 2017. As a trainee at LANXESS, he is currently not only gaining
technical experience but also applying his knowledge from his economics studies
to the conditions of the leather markets in the various regions around the
world.
Tanning is a highly specialized profession that requires
knowledge of chemistry, machinery and also biology. In Germany, approximately
20 young people start an apprenticeship in this trade each year, which covers
all stages of leather processing. This also includes handling measurement and
analysis devices for the use of chemicals on various types of leather. Dr.
Thomas Brackemeyer, who is responsible for the global organic leather chemicals
business in the Leather business unit at LANXESS, explained that “The training
is a modern technical profession, in which one deals with chemistry as well as
with the machines and the characteristics of the animal skin. Leather is a
particularly attractive, technically sophisticated and sustainable material. Today,
the manufacturing is harmless in terms of toxicology and the environment.
Extensive research provides support here, with our tanners playing a central
role in this.”
The tasks during the training include the mechanical and
manual processing of raw hides and leather, the examination and analysis of the
material for quality control as well as the development of tanning agents. In
addition, the prospective tanners learn how to roll, dry, coat, impregnate,
grease and dye the leather and also document numerous production processes.
At its Leverkusen site, LANXESS has a research and
development pilot plant in which some 60 people are employed. It includes a
small-scale tannery, where all the different stages of the manufacturing
process, from the salted raw cattle hide to the finished leather, can be
carried out just like in a full-scale tannery.
Vocational training has always been high priority at
LANXESS. Every year, the company offers in-depth vocational training in a wide
array of areas to young persons after they have left secondary school. Whether
scientists, technologists or businesspeople – the next generation of
specialists are provided with all the necessary tools for a career in the
chemical industry. A total of 620 young people are currently completing their
vocational training at LANXESS in Germany.
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