manufactured · input

Pressure-compensating drip emitters

Precision-molded emitters maintaining flow rate ±5% across wide pressure range; embody proprietary hydraulic path IP.

4

Source countries

4

Companies

1

Goods affected

0

Claims on record

What depends on it

Goods that need this input

1 essential American goods rely on pressure-compensating drip emitters somewhere upstream in their supply chain.

Where it comes from

Source countries

Share of global supply, by country.

CountryShare of supply
ILIsrael45%
CNChina28%
USUnited States12%
INIndia8%

Who makes it

Supplier companies

4 companies produce pressure-compensating drip emitters.

Netafim

HQ I 30% share

Israeli precision irrigation company (HQ Tel Aviv; 80% owned by Orbia (Mexico) since 2017; founded 1965 on Kibbutz Hatzerim in the Negev desert); invented commercial drip irrigation technology and remains the world's largest drip irrigation company by revenue (~$1B). Netafim's founding story is one of the most important agricultural innovation stories of the 20th century: in 1959, Israeli engineer Simcha Blass observed a large tree growing healthier than neighboring trees in an arid area — and discovered a slow leak in an underground pipe was the cause. Working with Kibbutz Hatzerim, Blass and colleagues developed the first practical drip emitter and founded Netafim in 1965. Drip irrigation — delivering water directly to plant roots at controlled rates — has transformed agriculture in water-scarce regions: Netafim systems are now used on 10+ million hectares across 112 countries, saving an estimated 50% of water vs flood irrigation while increasing yields 20-50%. The same Kibbutz cooperative in the Negev desert that invented drip irrigation now sources its raw material HDPE resin from Dow's Texas crackers and converts it into the precision tubing that feeds the world's most efficient farms.

Dayu Irrigation Group

HQ CN20% share

China's largest drip irrigation manufacturer; key supplier to Xinjiang cotton agribusiness; pending acquisition of Netafim (2026).

Rivulis

HQ I 15% share

Second-largest global drip irrigation company; formed 2023 via merger of Rivulis + Jain Irrigation international business; majority-owned by Temasek (Singapore)

Rain Bird Corporation

HQ US8% share

American irrigation equipment company (HQ Tucson AZ; private, employee-owned; ~$600M revenue); manufactures pressure-compensating drip emitters (Xeritec PC, Drip-in PC) for agricultural, landscape, and turf irrigation. Rain Bird was founded in 1933 by Clement and Mary LaFetra in Glendora California — the same year FDR took office and the Dust Bowl was beginning to devastate American agriculture. Rain Bird's sprinkler technology helped transform California and Arizona agriculture. Today Rain Bird is employee-owned (an Employee Stock Ownership Plan, or ESOP) and one of the few major irrigation companies that is neither Israeli-controlled nor Chinese-controlled. Rain Bird PC drip emitters serve US landscape and horticultural markets (golf courses, parks, vineyards) in addition to row crop agriculture.