- Paul Fentener van Vlissingen
Paul Fentener van Vlissingen (Utrecht,
March 21 ,1941 –Langbroek ,August 21 ,2006 ) was a Dutch businessman and philanthropist, brother ofJohn A. Fentener van Vlissingen .Fentener van Vlissingen inherited a significant shareholding in the company
SHV Holdings from his father, Frits Fentener van Vlissingen II, whose own father had co-founded the business through a merger with eight other Dutch trading families in 1896. Paul's father, described as one of the "fathers of the Dutch economy", later bought out most of the other families. [http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/SHV-Holdings-NV-Company-History.html]The reinvention of SHV Holdings
Paul Fentener van Vlissingen led SHV as chief executive officer for three decades from the mid-1960s. In 1995 he stepped down and then served as its non-executive chairman. SHV, originally Europe's largest
coal wholesaling business is the largest privately owned company in theNetherlands .Under Fentener van Vlissigen's leadership the company diversified into new areas ahead of the collapse of the coal market in the 1960s. The areas he became involved with included retail - through the Makro and Otto Reichelt chains of grocery supermarkets and cash & carries - and energy - through the acquisitions of LPG companies including
Calor Gas in the UK and Primagaz in France. He also diversified into scrap metal, recycling, oil exploration, renewable energy and private equity.Fentener van Vlissingen had a maverick leadership style and was more philosophical than most business leaders. For example, he recognised the possibility of the existence of
global warming as early as the early 1990s and had a love for cryptic aphorisms. He allowed young managers whom he trusted to establish Makro operations in overseas markets, giving them unusual amounts of autonomy.Philanthropy and conservation
Fentener Van Vlissingen was recognised as an enlightened conservationist and contributed to the development of game reserves in
Scotland ,South Africa ,Malawi ,Zambia andEthiopia . In 1978 he bought the wild and roadless convert|85000|acre|km2|-1Letterewe estate inWester Ross , and in 2006 was described as the largest foreign landowner in Scotland. "I don't call myself the owner," he said of Letterewe. "You can't own a place like this. It belongs to the planet. I'm only the guardian of it."An obituary published by
The Independent on 26 August 2006, said that van Vlissingen sometimes saddled a pony with a week's provisions and disappeared into the hills, staying at a bothy without lights or a toilet. The obituary said: "He was in the habit of inviting everyone, whether landowners, journalists, birdwatchers or ramblers, to visit the estate and talk about issues face to face."He also proposed reintroducing wolves and lynx to this estate (see [http://heritage.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=117&id=692962002] ). The Letterewe Accord, an agreement that gave ramblers freedom of access to the entire Letterewe estate in exchange for a pledge to respect the land, predated the Scottish Parliament's own right-to-roam legislation by over a decade. Van Vlissingen was also a great supporter of Scottish Gaelic, and donated GB pounds 250,000 to
Sabhal Mòr Ostaig , a Gaelic college onSkye (see [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/highlands_and_islands/5259420.stm] ).The
Sunday Times Rich List 2005 ranked Van Vlissingen as the richest man in Scotland, with an estimated wealth of £1.1 billion.After near fatal brush with
pancreatic cancer in 1980, he founded the Van Vlissingen Cancer Fund, which is now one of the major cancer fundraisers in the Netherlands.Entrepreneurs are jackasses
In 2001 he wrote a book entitled "Ondernemers zijn ezels" (ISBN 90-5018-295-X), which can be translated as "Entrepreneurs Are Jackasses". In this book he discussed his experiences directing a large multi-national conglomerate. He followed this up in 2002 with a book entitled "Overstekende ezels" (ISBN 90-5018-583-5), translated as "Crossing Jackasses". In this he discusses his views regarding entrepreneurs, corruption,
ambition , theEuro ,money ,honesty ,change andsuccess .Deathbed warning for the planet
In April 2006, van Vlissingen announced that he had terminal pancreatic cancer and that he would not be having chemotherapy. He said: "In the Western world we mistakenly try to keep death at bay. I look to Native Americans instead. When they see their death approaching, they visit good friends and family to share happy memories and look back at the good things."
In an interview with the Dutch newspaper
De Telegraaf published in April 2006, he said: "Our planet is in a much sorrier state than it was when I was a child. The destruction cannot go on at this pace. My generation should be ashamed of the condition in which we are passing on our planet to future generations."In August 2006, the cancer got worse, and this led to his death during the night of the 20th-21st August 2006. The information of his death was released to the public on the 22nd of August. Many broadcasters stated (wrongly) that Fentener van Vlissingen was the middle child of the three Van Vlissingen brothers. In fact, Paul was the youngest, John was the middle child and is last alive, and Frits III was the eldest. Frits III died in March 2006.
Unorthodox to the last
In February 2006 it emerged that in his will Fentener van Vlissingen left a significant portion of his estate to his partner, the former Guardian art critic Caroline Tisdall, as well as several million to his lover Suzanne Wolff.
The Scotsman and theDaily Mail reported that Tisdall had been prepared to tolerate the billionaire's relationship with Wolff in his latter years. He left the bulk of his fortune and the Letterewe Estate in North-West Scotland to his two daughters, Alicia and Tet and to their children. According theDaily Mail , nothing was left to his ex-wife and the mother of Alicia and Tet, Ank Van Vlissingen.
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