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DuPont 2004 Data Book
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Page 1: du pont 2004 Data Book

DuPont2004 Data Book

Page 2: du pont 2004 Data Book

1 | DuPont Leadership

2 | 2004 @ a Glance

4 | Corporate Financial DataHighlightsSegment InformationConsolidated Income StatementConsolidated Balance SheetConsolidated Statement of Cash FlowsSelected Additional Data

14 | The DuPont Commitment:Safety, Health and the Environment

15 | The New DuPont

16 | DuPont Science & Technology

18 | Business SegmentsAgriculture & NutritionCoatings & Color TechnologiesElectronic & Communication TechnologiesPerformance MaterialsSafety & ProtectionPharmaceuticals

39 | Major Sites and Principal Products

Main Office Number: (302) 774-4994

Fax: (302) 773-2631

Internet: www.dupont.com

Contents

DuPont DATA BOOK has been prepared to assist financial analysts,portfolio managers and others in understanding and evaluating thecompany. This book presents graphics, tabular and other statisticaldata about the consolidated company and its business segments.The information presented in this book is generally included in, orcan be calculated from information included in, previously publishedcompany reports on Forms 10K, 10Q, and 8K. Dollars are in millionsexcept per share or where otherwise indicated. Most notes tofinancial statements are not included. This information is only asummary and should be read in conjunction with the company’saudited consolidated financial statements and “Management’sDiscussion and Analysis” located in the 2004 Annual Report onForm 10K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

DuPont DATA BOOK is available on the Web at www.dupont.com.

The DuPont Oval Logo, DuPontTM, The miracles of science® and allproducts denoted with TM or ® are trademarks or registered trademarksof E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company or its affiliates.

April 2005

Carl J. Lukach

Vice President DuPont

Investor Relations

(302) 774-0001

Carol A. Wolff

Investor Relations

Coordinator

(302) 774-9870

Pamela Lanham

Investor Relations

Coordinator

(302) 774-4162

David L. Peet

Director

(302) 774-1125

Joyce A. McGhee

Manager

(302) 774-6088

DuPontInvestor Relations

Page 3: du pont 2004 Data Book

Craig G. NaylorGroup Vice President DuPont Electronic &CommunicationTechnologies

James C. Borel*Senior Vice PresidentDuPont Human Resources

Charles O. Holliday, Jr. *Chairman of the Board and

Chief Executive Officer

Alain J. P. Belda * ††Chairman and

Chief Executive Officer,

Alcoa Inc.

Richard H. Brown * †††Former Chairman of the Board and

Chief Executive Officer,

Electronic Data Systems

Curtis J. Crawford † †††President and Chief Executive Officer,

XCEO, Inc.

John T. Dillon * †Retired Chairman of the Board and

Chief Executive Officer,

International Paper

Louisa C. Duemling **

Deborah C. Hopkins †Chief Operations and Technology Officer,

Citigroup, Inc.

Lois D. Juliber * ††Retired Vice Chairman,

Colgate-Palmolive Company

Masahisa Naitoh **Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,

The Institute of Energy Economics, Japan

William K. Reilly ** †††President and Chief Executive Officer,

Aqua International Partners, LP;

Former Administrator,

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

H. Rodney Sharp, III † ††

Charles M. Vest †President Emeritus and Professor of

Mechanical Engineering,

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Board Committees:† Audit

†† Compensation

††† Corporate Governance

** Environmental Policy

* Strategic Direction *Member, Office of the Chief Executive

Board ofDirectors

SeniorLeaders

Thomas M. Connelly, Jr.*Senior Vice President and Chief Science &Technology Officer

Edward J. DonnellyGroup Vice PresidentDuPont Coatings & Color Technologies

J. Erik FyrwaldGroup Vice President DuPont Agriculture & Nutrition

Richard R.Goodmanson*Executive Vice President& Chief Operating Officer

Diane H. GulyasChief Marketing & Sales Officer

John C. Hodgson*Senior Vice President

Charles O. Holliday, Jr.*Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

W. Donald JohnsonGroup Vice PresidentDuPont Global Operations

Jeffrey L. KeeferGroup Vice PresidentDuPont PerformanceMaterials

Ellen J. KullmanGroup Vice President DuPont Safety & Protection

Mathieu Vrijsen

President

DuPont Europe, Middle East

and Africa

Stacey J. Mobley*Senior Vice President,Chief Administrative Officer& General Counsel

Gary M. Pfeiffer*Senior Vice Presidentand Chief Financial Officer

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Page 4: du pont 2004 Data Book

During 2004 DuPont closed the divestiture of its INVISTA™ fibers unit and completed a complex, challenging, and necessary transformation. We are today a sustainable growth company focused on five industry-leading platforms:

DuPont Agriculture & Nutrition ■ DuPont Coatings & Color Technologies ■ DuPont Electronic & Communication Technologies■ DuPont Performance Materials ■ DuPont Safety & Protection

Within each platform and across our company, our leadership and teams are executing our strategies on putting our science to work, going wherethe growth is, and leveraging the power of DuPont. As a result we delivered significantly improved financial performance throughout the year.

DuPont 2004 At-a-Glance

May

DuPont announced it would be the title and “innovative building products”sponsor of the DuPont Monster Bridge, a first-of-its kind motor sports spectator venue at Delaware’s Dover International Speedway, known as theMonster Mile®.

DuPont and Tate & Lyle PLC announced a joint venture to create productsfrom renewable resources such as corn for numerous applications includingclothing, interiors, engineered polymers and textile fibers. This agreementmarks another important step in our bio-based materials R&D and the commercialization of Sorona™ brand bio-based products.

Scientists from DuPont subsidiary Pioneer Hi-Bred International and VerdiaInc. developed a novel trait giving plants resistance to the commonly usedfood and non-food crop herbicide glyphosate.

DuPont Performance Materials announced an expansion of productioncapacity for its specialties product series in China — through an exclusiveagreement with a licensed contract compounder in Shanghai.

DuPont de Colombia, S.A. received the 2004 Excellence Award during the10th anniversary celebration of “Responsible Care” in Colombia.

June

DuPont announced production expansion plans for its high-performanceDuPont™ Kevlar® para-aramid. The expansion will increase global Kevlar®

capacity by more than 10 percent.

DuPont and Wuxi Xingda Nylon Co., Ltd., of Wuxi, China, completed formationand startup of a joint venture for the production and distribution of filamentsused in toothbrush, paint brush, cosmetic and industrial brush applications.

DuPont signed definitive agreements to acquire Verdia, Inc., a wholly ownedsubsidiary of Maxygen, Inc. Verdia is dedicated to becoming a global leaderin providing proprietary product solutions to important commercial problemsin plant-based businesses through the application of advanced trait optimization methods.

DuPont acquired the animal health business assets of BioSentry, Inc., aleading biosecurity company providing animal health prevention programsin 50 countries.

For the second consecutive year, DuPont subsidiary Pioneer Hi-BredInternational was voted the number one place to work in an annual Web-based survey of readers of The Scientist magazine.

Teams from DuPont Performance Coatings and FinishMaster receivedSoutheast (U.S.) Toyota’s 2004 “Award of Excellence.”

The Stine Haskell Research Center in Newark, Delaware, was acceptedinto the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) NationalPerformance Track Program.

July

The BAX® system, a genetics-based diagnostic tool developed by DuPontQualicon, was approved by the Ministry of Agriculture in Brazil as anOfficial Reference Method to detect Salmonella in food, water and environmental samples. DuPont announced its quarterly dividend, the 400th consecutive quarterlydividend since the company’s first dividend in the fourth quarter of 1904.

January

DuPont announced a definitive agreement to sell INVISTA to Koch subsidiaries and that it was aligning its organizational structure to implement the customer- and market-focused growth and productivityactions announced on December 1, 2003.

On the R&D front, DuPont announced that a research team from DuPontsubsidiary Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc. achieved a scientific breakthrough by identifying a gene found in guar and carob plants that produces “gum,” a key food additive.

DuPont Mexico was named one of the country’s ‘Most Admired Companies’for superior environmental protection according to a survey published bythe business magazine Expansion.

February

DuPont acquired Retrim, a safety glass interlayer company, with plant operations in Zlin, Czech Republic. This business was integrated into theglass laminates business within Performance Materials.

Additionally, DuPont acquired additional equity in its DuPont Red Lion jointventures in Beijing and Changchun, China, to reinforce its position as theleading coatings supplier to the growing Chinese automotive industry.

8th Continent, a joint venture between DuPont and General Mills,announced the launch of 8th Continent® Light soymilks — with 50 percentfewer carbohydrates and 25 percent fewer calories than skim milk.

DuPont Chairman and CEO Chad Holliday was elected a member of theNational Academy of Engineering; and DuPont’s ranking rose from 28th to26th on the Annual Reputation Quotient (RQ), developed by HarrisInteractive and the Reputation Institute.

Flexible circuits made with DuPont™ Pyralux® flexible laminates poweredthe high-resolution stereo panoramic cameras on Opportunity and Spirit,the Mars Exploration Rovers (MER) that landed on the Red Planet.

March

DuPont announced the acquisition of the assets of Guangzhou Montelli MaterialTechnology Corporation, a solid surfacing business located in the People’sRepublic of China (PRC). This unit was integrated into DuPont Surfaces.

DuPont and Zhonghao New Materials Company, Ltd., announced they completed formation of a joint venture to manufacture hydrofluorocarbon(HFC) blend refrigerants to support the fast-growing air conditioning andrefrigeration industry in China.

Fortune magazine named DuPont #36 on the Global Most AdmiredCompanies All Star list. USA Today ranked DuPont Corporate EconomistBob Shrouds as one of the top ten economic forecasters of 2003.

April

DuPont announced plans to add a USD 15 million glass interlayer manufacturing line at its site in Fayetteville, North Carolina. The new linewill manufacture DuPont™ SentryGlas® Plus interlayers.

DuPont and subsidiaries of Koch Industries, Inc. closed the sale of INVISTA.

2 | DUPONT 20 04

Page 5: du pont 2004 Data Book

August

DuPont dedicated a $130 million facility in Old Hickory, Tennessee, to produceinnovative nonwoven fabrics born from a revolutionary composite technologythat provides users with advanced levels of both comfort and protection.DuPont Photonics Technologies, a provider of practical integrated optical components and a wholly owned subsidiary of DuPont, celebrated its secondanniversary in Wilmington, Massachusetts. The New York Stock Exchange board elected Ed Woolard, retired chairmanof DuPont, to its board of directors. DuPont Chairman and CEO Chad Holliday was named chairman of the BusinessRoundtable’s Environment, Technology & the Economy Task Force. The TaskForce promotes public policies that encourage superior environmental performance and foster vigorous economic growth. The Task Force alsohas promoted development and global deployment of new, highly efficienttechnologies that minimize carbon emissions and maximize carbon captureas a way to address climate change.

September

DuPont Electronic Technologies and Cheil Industries, Inc., part of theSamsung Group, signed a 50/50 joint venture agreement, to establish SDFlex Company, LLC. SD Flex Company will manufacture DuPont™ Pyralux®

adhesiveless, flexible copper clad laminate composite, the material instrumentalin enabling advanced functionality and performance in displays, cell phones,personal digital assistants and other electronic devices. DuPont Japan and Maruwa Biochemical Co., Ltd. signed an agreement toestablish a marketing and sales joint venture — DuPont Farm Solutions K.K.— for crop protection products in Japan. Lowe’s Home Improvement Stores named DuPont Garden Products‘Supplier of the Year’ in the nursery category. For the seventh consecutiveyear, Carta Capital magazine named DuPont the most admired chemicalcompany in Brazil.DuPont was honored as one of the “100 Best Companies for WorkingMothers” in the United States by Working Mother magazine.

October

Bunge Limited and DuPont announced a new soybean oil that enables foodservice providers and food processors to reduce or eliminate trans fattyacids in their products. This important new product will be marketed underthe brand NUTRIUM™ and combines DuPont Pioneer soybean breedingcapabilities to produce low linolenic soy beans with Bunge strengths insoybean oil processing and distribution.

November

DuPont announced that it will build a $10 million laboratory in Japan to facilitate technical approvals for automotive coatings used by Japaneseauto manufacturers worldwide and to support their home country assemblyoperations. The new facility, in Aichi Prefecture, will open in the third quarterof 2005, and employ approximately 30 scientists. DuPont was voted the world’s most respected energy and chemicals companyfor the 4th straight year — according to the 2004 PricewaterhouseCoopers’“World’s Most Respected Companies” survey published in the Financial Times.

December

Pioneer corn hybrids led the National Corn Growers Association Corn YieldAwards, winning 24 of 27 national awards. Among Pioneer’s first place finishes was an award for the overall highest yield, which produced 339bushels per acre in the National Corn Growers Association Corn Yield Contest.Readers of Industrial Safety and Hygiene News named DuPont the organization that first comes to mind when they think of a world-class safetyand health program, DuPont ranked first by almost 10 times more than thesecond place finisher.DuPont Argentina was named a “Best Place to Work” in the “2004 GreatPlaces to Work” survey.

Photos (clockwise):

DuPont™ Tyvek® wraps the walls of 550 million buildings in the US, 180 million buildings in Japan, and 50 million buildings in Europe.

DuPont digital inks provide a full spectrum of color options that are bright,clear and unfading.

Firefighters depend on Nomex® flame retardant materials in protectiveapparel.

Researcher Jesus Figueroa inspects soybean plants in a field at Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.

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Page 6: du pont 2004 Data Book

4 | DUPONT 20 04

2004 2003

Operating Results Net sales $27,340 $26,996Income 1 1,780 1,002Net income(loss) 1,780 973-2

Income before special items 1 2,393 1,669Depreciation 1,124 1,355Cash provided by operating activities 3,231 2,589Capital expenditures 1,298 1,784Research and development expense 5 1,333 1,349

Financial Position, Total assets $35,632 $37,039Year End Working capital 7,272 5,419

Total debt 6,485-6 10,479-6

Stockholders’ equity 11,377 9,781

Data Per Common Share Income 1, 7 $1.77 $0.99Net income (loss) 7 $1.77 $0.96-2

Income before special items 1, 7 $2.38 $1.66Cash provided by operating activities 7 $3.22 $2.59Dividends $1.40 $1.40Market price – year-end close $49.05 $45.89

high-low range $49.39 – $39.88 $46.00 – $34.71Book value at year-end $11.20 $9.57Average number of shares (millions) – diluted 1,003 1,000Shares outstanding – year-end (millions) 994 997

Ratios Total stockholder return 9.9% 11.5%Dividend yield 8 2.9% 3.1%Share price increase (decrease) 6.9% 8.2%

P/E on income before special items 1, 8 21 28Dividend payout, as percentage of:

Earnings per share before special items 1 58.8% 84.3%Cash provided by operating activities per share 43.5% 54.1%

Return on average stockholders’ equity before special items 1 23.0% 17.9%Return on average investors’ capital before special items 1 12.3% 9.0%Cash provided by operating activities as percentage of total debt 6 49.8% 24.7%Debt to total capital 6 34.2% 50.3%Interest coverage ratio 10 11.5 7.9Current ratio 6 1.9 1.2

Employees Number of employees – year-end (thousands) 60 81

1 Before cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles.2 Includes a cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle charge of $29 and $0.03 per share (diluted).3 Includes a cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle charge of $2,944 and $2.95 per share (diluted).4 Includes a cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle benefit of $11 and $.01 per share (diluted).5 Excludes purchased in-process research and development.6 Includes related assets and/or liabilities classified as held for sale within the Consolidated Balance Sheet.7 Diluted, based on average number of common shares.8 Based on year-end share price.9 Ratio excludes increase in tax payments related to sale of DuPont Pharmaceuticals.

10 Income before special items and income taxes, plus the sum of interest expense and amortization of capitalized interest less interest income, divided by the sum of interest expense and capitalized interest less interest income.

Use of Non-GAAP Measures

Management believes that measures of earnings before special items (“non-GAAP” information) are meaningful to investors because they provide insight with respect to ongoingoperating results of the company. Special items represent significant charges or credits that are important to an understanding of the company’s ongoing operations. Such measurementsare not recognized in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and should not be viewed as an alternative to GAAP measures of performance. A reconciliationof non-GAAP measures to GAAP is provided on the Web at www.dupont.com. For a list of special items 2002-2004, see page 23 of the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10K.

Corporate Highlights (dollars in millions, except per share)

Corporate Financial Data

Page 7: du pont 2004 Data Book

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2003 2004

(dollars)

$1.50

$1.00

$1.10

$1.20

$1.30

$1.40

(dollars)

$0.50

$1.00

$1.50

$2.00

$2.50

$3.00

2000 2001 2002 2003 20042000 2001 2002

Earnings Per Share – DilutedBefore Special Items

2002 2001 2000

$24,006 $24,726 $28,2681,841 4,328 2,314

(1,103) 3 4,339-4 2,3142,009 1,251 2,8781,297 1,320 1,4152,439 2,454 4,8301,416 1,634 2,0221,264 1,588 1,776

$34,621 $40,319 $39,4266,363 6,734 2,4016,832 6,814 9,9059,063 14,452 13,299

$1.84 $4.15 $2.19$(1.11)-3 $4.16-4 $2.19$2.00 $1.19 $2.73$2.44 $2.36 $4.60$1.40 $1.40 $1.40

$42.40 $42.51 $48.31$49.80 – $35.02 $49.88 – $32.64 $74.00 – $38.19

$8.88 $14.20 $12.57999 1,041 1,051994 1,002 1,039

3.0% (9.1)% (24.5)%3.3% 3.3% 2.9%

(0.3)% (12.0)% (26.7)%21 36 18

70% 117.6% 51.3%57.3% 59.4% 30.5%17.4% 9.4% 21.8%10.6% 6.8% 13.8%65.1%-9 36.0% 48.8%37.3% 28.8% 42%9.7 4.7 6.71.9 1.8 1.3

79 79 93

Dividends Per Share

Stockholder Return DuPont S&P 500

Dividend Yield 3.1% 1.5%

Share Price Annual Appreciation (5.7)% (3.8)%

Total Annual Return* (2.7)% (2.3)%

Dividend Growth 0.0% 3.0%

Five-Year Performance 2000– 2004

Stockholder Return DuPont S&P 500

Dividend Yield 2.7% 1.6%

Share Price Annual Appreciation 5.7% 10.2%

Total Annual Return* 8.8% 12.1%

Dividend Growth 4.4% 3.8%

* Assumes a steady compounded rate of return over the period shown and includes reinvestment of dividends.

Ten-Year Performance 1995–2004

Page 8: du pont 2004 Data Book

Corporate Financial Data

6 | DUPONT 20 04

DuPont’s Share of Equity Affiliate Sales

DuPont’s Share of Equity Affiliate Earnings

2004 2003 2002 2004 2003 20022000Equity Affiliate AnalysisAgriculture & Nutrition $ 79 $ 151 $ 177 $ (4) $ (7) $ (6)Coatings & Color Technologies 46 71 109 3 3 (3)Electronic & Communication Technologies 284 233 211 29 8 10Performance Materials 876 1,143 1,073 (100)-1 9 33Safety & Protection 64 59 55 13 14 10Textiles & Interiors 932 675 726 71 (277)-2 (4)Other – – – (2) – –

Total segments $2,281 $2,332 $2,351 $ 10 $ (250) $ 40

1 Includes a charge of $150 for antitrust litigation matters associated with DuPont Dow Elastomers LLC which was accounted for as an equity affiliate until April 30, 2004.2 Includes impairment charge of $293 in connection with the planned separation of INVISTA.

2004 2003 2002

Segment Sales 1

Agriculture & Nutrition $ 6,247 $ 5,470 $ 4,516Coatings & Color Technologies 6,028 5,503 5,026Electronic & Communication Technologies 3,279 2,892 2,540Performance Materials 4 6,633 5,376 4,926Safety & Protection 4,693 4,075 3,479Textiles & Interiors 5 3,250 6,937 6,221Other 44 15 20

Total segment sales 30,174 30,268 26,728

Elimination of transfers (553) (940) (371)Elimination of equity affiliate sales (2,281) (2,332) (2,351)

Net sales per Consolidated Financial Statements $27,340 $26,996 $24,006

Segment Pretax Operating Income – Before Special ItemsAgriculture & Nutrition $ 800 $ 605 $ 502Coatings & Color Technologies 814 731 826Electronic & Communication Technologies 367 181 285Performance Materials 630 410 683Pharmaceuticals 681 548 468Safety & Protection 910 807 753Textiles & Interiors 142 (1) 293Other (139) (143) (138)

Total segment pretax operating income – before special items 4,205 3,138 3,672

Exchange gains and losses (411) (220) (268)Corporate expenses and interest (932) (930) (878)Income before special items, income taxes, and minority interests 2 2,862 1,988 2,526Net special items 3 (1,420) (1,845) (402)

Income before income taxes and minority interests 2 $ 1,442 $ 143 $ 2,124

1 Sales include transfers and pro rata share of equity affiliate sales.2 Before cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles.3 For complete details of special items, see the DuPont 2004 Form 10-K.4 Performance Materials 2004 sales include the benefit from the consolidation of DuPont Dow Elastomers (DDE) in April 2004.5 Textiles & Interiors 2004 sales reflect the divestiture of INVISTA in April 2004.

Segment Information (dollars in millions)

Page 9: du pont 2004 Data Book

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2004 2003

1st 2nd 3rd 4th Full Yr. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Full Yr.

Segment Sales 1

Agriculture & Nutrition $ 2,202 $ 2,077 $ 969 $ 999 $ 6,247 $ 1,790 $ 1,886 $ 803 $ 991 $ 5,470Coatings & Color Technologies 1,417 1,560 1,476 1,575 6,028 1,269 1,419 1,378 1,437 5,503 Electronic & Communication Technologies 816 845 815 803 3,279 677 737 728 750 2,892 Performance Materials 1,519 1,703 1,672 1,739 6,633 1,336 1,354 1,299 1,387 5,376Safety & Protection 1,088 1,168 1,185 1,252 4,693 986 1,062 999 1,028 4,075Textiles & Interiors 1,883 826 286 255 3,250 1,717 1,779 1,744 1,697 6,937Other 12 13 12 7 44 2 3 4 6 15

Total segment sales $ 8,937 $ 8,192 $ 6,415 $ 6,630 $30,174 $ 7,777 $ 8,240 $ 6,955 $ 7,296 $30,268

Segment Pretax Operating Income – Before Special Items

Agriculture & Nutrition $ 630 $ 482 $ (184) $ (128) $ 800 $ 518 $ 439 $ (214) $ (138) $ 605Coatings & Color Technologies 189 214 179 232 814 141 214 178 198 731Electronic & Communication Technologies 92 87 97 91 367 32 49 36 64 181Performance Materials 156 171 160 143 630 133 120 79 78 410Pharmaceuticals 148 174 173 186 681 153 88 137 170 548Safety & Protection 232 234 217 227 910 206 220 180 201 807Textiles & Interiors 150 15 (14) (9) 142 5 9 (23) 8 (1)Other (33) (48) (25) (33) (139) (28) (61) (12) (42) (143)

Total segment pretax operatingincome – before special items 1,564 1,329 603 709 4,205 1,160 1,078 361 539 3,138

Exchange gains and losses (13) (76) (22) (300) (411) (50) (72) (11) (87) (220)Corporate expenses and interest (213) (229) (226) (264) (932) (212) (233) (249) (236) (930)Income before special items,

income taxes, and minority interests 2 1,338 1,024 355 145 2,862 898 773 101 216 1,988

Pretax Impact of Special Items 3

Textiles & Interiors related items (345) (183) (102) (37) (667) – 16 (1,605) (310) (1,899)Employee separation

costs and asset impairment charges – (433) – 22 (411) – – – 17 17Gain on asset sales – – – – – – 62 – – 62Litigation costs (186) (45) (63) (98) (392) (78) – 25 (25) (78)Other – – 35 15 50 – 30 23 – 53

Net impact of special items (531) (661) (130) (98) (1,420) (78) 108 (1,557) (318) (1,845)Income before income taxes and

minority interests $ 807 $ 363 $ 225 $ 47 $ 1,442 $ 820 $ 881 $ (1,456) $ (102) $ 143

2004 2003

1st 2nd 3rd 4th Full Yr. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Full Yr.

Earnings Per Share of Common Stock – Diluted 2, 4

Earnings before special items $ 0.96 $ 0.80 $ 0.25 $ 0.37 $ 2.38 $ 0.61 $ 0.62 $ 0.13 $ 0.29 $ 1.66Special items (0.30) (0.30) 0.08 (0.09) (0.61) (0.05) 0.05 (1.01) 0.34 (0.67)Reported earnings $ 0.66 $ 0.50 $ 0.33 $ 0.28 $ 1.77 $ 0.56 $ 0.67 $ (0.88) $ 0.63 $ 0.99

1 Sales include transfers and pro rata share of equity affiliate sales.2 Before cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles.3 For complete details of special items, see the DuPont 2004 form 10K.4 Earnings per share for the year may not equal the sum of quarterly earnings per share due to changes in average share calculations.

Page 10: du pont 2004 Data Book

Consolidated Income Statements (dollars in millions, except per share)

8 | DUPONT 20 04

For the year ended December 31, 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

Net sales $27,340 $26,996 $24,006 $24,726 $28,268Other income 1 655 734 516 644 934

Total 27,995 27,730 24,522 25,370 29,202

Cost of goods sold and other operating charges 20,416 20,759 17,529 17,980 19,546Selling, general and administrative expenses 3,141 3,067 2,763 2,992 3,117Amortization of intangible assets 223 229 218 434 445Research and development expense 1,333 1,349 1,264 1,588 1,776Interest expense 362 347 359 590 810Purchased in-process research and development – – – – (11)Employee separation costs and asset impairment

charges (credits) 411 (17) 290 1,078 101Separation charges – Textiles & Interiors 667 1,620 – – –Goodwill impairment – Textiles & Interiors – 295 – – –Gain on sale of interest by subsidiary – nonoperating – (62) – – –Gain on sale of DuPont Pharmaceuticals – – (25) (6,136) –Gain on issuance of stock by affiliates – nonoperating – – – – (29)

Total 26,553 27,587 22,398 18,526 25,755

Income before income taxes and minority interests 1,442 143 2,124 6,844 3,447(Benefit from) provision for income taxes (329) (930) 185 2,467 1,072Minority interests in (losses) earnings of

consolidated subsidiaries (9) 71 98 49 61Income before cumulative effect of changes in

accounting principles 1,780 1,002 1,841 4,328 2,314Cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles,

net of income taxes – (29) (2,944) 11 –Net income (loss) $1,780 $ 973 $(1,103) $ 4,339 $ 2,314

Diluted earnings (loss) per share of common stockIncome before cumulative effect of

changes in accounting principles $1.77 $ 0.99 $ 1.84 $ 4.15 $ 2.19Cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles – (0.03) (2.95) .01 –Net income (loss) $1.77 $ 0.96 $ (1.11) $ 4.16 $ 2.19

1 Other Income:Cozaar®/Hyzaar® income $ 675 $ 573 $ 469 $ 321 $ 92Royalty income 151 141 128 155 160Interest income, net of miscellaneous interest expense 188 70 97 146 168Equity in (losses) earnings of affiliates (39) 10 36 (43) 289Net gains on sales of assets 28 17 30 47 394Net exchange losses* (391) (134) (294) (29) (35)Miscellaneous income and expenses – net 43 57 50 47 (134)Total Other Income $ 655 $ 734 $ 516 $ 644 $ 934

* 2004, 2003, and 2002 include net exchange losses of $391, $164, and $231 respectively, which resulted from hedging an increased net monetary asset position and a weakening U.S. dollar.Such losses are largely offset by associated tax benefits.

Corporate Financial Data

Page 11: du pont 2004 Data Book

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December 31 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

AssetsCurrent assets

Cash and cash equivalents $ 3,369 $ 3,273 $ 3,678 $ 5,763 $ 1,540Marketable debt securities 167 25 465 85 77Accounts and notes receivable, net 4,889 4,218 3,884 3,903 4,552Inventories 4,489 4,107 4,409 4,215 4,658Prepaid expenses 209 208 175 217 228Income taxes 1,557 1,141 848 618 601Assets held for sale 531 5,490 – – –

Total current assets 15,211 18,462 13,459 14,801 11,656

Property, plant and equipment 23,978 24,149 33,732 33,778 34,650Less: accumulated depreciation 13,754 14,257 20,446 20,491 20,468Net property, plant and equipment 10,224 9,892 13,286 13,287 14,182

Goodwill 2,082 1,939 1,167 3,746 3,935Other intangible assets 2,848 2,986 3,109 3,151 4,430Investment in affiliates 1,034 1,304 2,047 2,045 2,206Other assets 4,233 2,456 1,553 3,289 3,017

Total $35,632 $37,039 $34,621 $40,319 $39,426

Liabilities and Stockholders’ EquityCurrent liabilities

Accounts payable $ 2,753 $ 2,412 $ 2,727 $ 2,219 $ 2,731Short-term borrowings and capital lease obligations 936 5,914 1,185 1,464 3,247Income taxes 192 60 47 1,295 250Other accrued liabilities 3,962 2,963 3,137 3,089 3,027Liabilities held for sale 96 1,694 – – –Total current liabilities 7,939 13,043 7,096 8,067 9,255

Long-term borrowings and capital lease obligations 5,548 4,301 5,647 5,350 6,658Other liabilities 8,692 8,909 9,829 8,447 8,614Deferred income taxes 966 508 563 1,579 1,220

Total liabilities 23,145 26,761 23,135 23,443 25,747

Minority interests 1,110 497 2,423 2,424 380Stockholders’ equity 11,377 9,781 9,063 14,452 13,299

Total $35,632 $37,039 $34,621 $40,319 $39,426

Consolidated Balance Sheets (dollars in millions)

Page 12: du pont 2004 Data Book

10 | DUPONT 20 04

For the year ended December 31, 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

Operating activitiesNet income (loss) $ 1,780 $ 973 $(1,103) $ 4,339 $ 2,314Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to cash

provided by operating activities: Cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles – 29 2,944 (11) –Depreciation 1,124 1,355 1,297 1,320 1,415Amortization of intangible assets 223 229 218 434 445Separation charges – Textiles & Interiors 667 1,620 – – –Goodwill impairment – Textiles & Interiors – 295 – – –Gain on sale of DuPont Pharmaceuticals – – (25) (6,136) –Other operating activities – net 774 334 833 1,000 648(Increase) decrease in operating assets:

Accounts and notes receivable (309) (852) 468 435 379Inventories and other operating assets (140) (125) (476) (362) (727)

(Decrease) increase in operating liabilities: Accounts payable and other operating liabilities (28) (51) (158) (408) 215Accrued interest and income taxes (860) (1,218) (1,559) 1,843 141

Cash provided by operating activities 3,231 2,589 2,439 2,454 4,830

Investing activitiesPurchases of property, plant and equipment (1,232) (1,713) (1,280) (1,494) (1,925)Investments in affiliates (66) (71) (136) (140) (97)Payments for businesses net of cash acquired (119) (1,527) (697) (78) (46)Proceeds from sale of assets

Textiles & Interiors, net of cash sold 3,840 – – – –Net cash flows related to sale of DuPont Pharmaceuticals – – (122) 7,798 –Proceeds from sale of other assets 68 17 196 253 703Purchase of beneficial interest in securitized trade receivables – (445) – – –Maturity/repayment of beneficial interest

in securitized trade receivables – 445 – – –Net (increase) decrease in short-term financial instruments (137) 458 (318) (2) 25Forward exchange contract settlements (509) (631) (264) 93 139Other investing activities – net 91 92 29 (117) 96

Cash provided by (used for) investing activities 1,936 (3,375) (2,592) 6,313 (1,105)

Financing activitiesDividends paid to stockholders (1,404) (1,407) (1,401) (1,460) (1,465)Net (decrease) increase in short-term

(less than 90 days) borrowings (3,853) 3,792 607 (1,588) (95)Long-term and other borrowings:

Receipts 1,601 553 934 904 4,996Payments (1,555) (954) (1,822) (2,342) (6,473)

Acquisition of treasury stock (457) – (470) (1,818) (462)Proceeds from exercise of stock options 197 52 34 153 63Increase in minority interests – – – 1,980 –Redemption of minority interest structures – (2,037) – – –Other financing activities – net (79) 32 – – –

Cash (used for) provided by financing activities (5,550) 31 (2,118) (4,171) (3,436)

Net cash flow from discontinued operations 1 – – – (110) –Effect of exchange rate changes on cash 404 425 186 (263) (215)Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents $ 21 $ (330) $(2,085) $ 4,223 $ 74Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year 3,348 3,678 5,763 1,540 1,466Cash and cash equivalents at end of year $ 3,369 $ 3,348-2 $ 3,678 $ 5,763 $ 1,540

1 Includes payments of direct expenses related to the Conoco divestiture.2 Includes cash classified as assets held for sale within the Consolidated Balance Sheet.

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (dollars in millions)

Corporate Financial Data

Page 13: du pont 2004 Data Book

| 11

Selected Additional Data (dollars in millions) (dolars in millions)

2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

Effective Income Tax Rate Statutory U.S. federal income tax rate 35.0% 35.0% 35.0% 35.0% 35.0%Separation charges – Textiles & Interiors (6.2) 83.8 – – –Tax basis investment losses on foreign subsidiaries 1 (9.5) (467.5) – – –Lower effective tax rates on international operations – net (20.8) (149.3) (13.8) (1.0) (2.1)Lower effective tax rate on export sales (3.3) (23.8) (2.2) (0.6) (1.7)Tax settlements (9.5) – – – –DDE Litigation 5.2 – – – –Exchange gains/losses 2 (14.9) (85.5) (5.6) 0.2 (1.1)Domestic operations 1.2 (49.2) (1.7) 1.0 (0.1)Postemployment costs – – (2.3) – 0.6State taxes – 6.2 (0.7) 1.4 0.5

Effective income tax rate (22.8)% (650.3)% 8.7% 36.0% 31.1%

1 Reflects recording deferred tax assets in two European subsidiaries for tax basis investment losses to be recognized on local tax returns. 2 Principally reflects the benefit of non-taxable exchange gains resulting from remeasurement of foreign currency denominated monetary assets and liabilities.

2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

As a percentage of net sales: Cost of goods sold and other operating charges 75% 77% 73% 73% 69%Selling, general and administrative expenses 11 11 12 12 11Research and development expense 5 5 5 6 6Income before special items 9 6 8 5 10Cash provided by operating activities 12 10 10 10 17

Selected Additional Data Annual percent change in net sales versus prior year* 11% 9% 1% (10)% 1%

Portion due to U.S. dollar selling prices 5 4 (3) (2) (1)Portion due to volume and mix* 6 5 4 (8) 2

Average manufacturing capacity utilization 84% 80% 81% 78% 81%

* Percentage changes are calculated using sales adjusted to exclude current-year sales from acquisitions when there are no comparable prior-year sales, and to exclude prior-year salesof businesses that have been divested. Percentage changes in 2004 also exclude additions to sales from the consolidation of DuPont Dow Elastomers LLC as a variable interest entity.

Page 14: du pont 2004 Data Book

12 | DUPONT 20 04

2004 2003 2002

Financial Results by QuarterNet sales

1st $ 8,073 $ 7,008 $ 6,1422nd 7,527 7,369 6,7003rd 5,740 6,142 5,4824th 6,000 6,477 5,682

Total $27,340 $26,996 $24,006

Income before special items1st $ 964 $ 615 $ 5522nd 805 623 7113rd 253 135 4014th 371 296 345

Total $ 2,393 $ 1,669 $ 2,009

Earnings before special items per share of common stock – diluted1st $ 0.96 $ 0.61 $ 0.552nd 0.80 0.62 0.713rd 0.25 0.13 0.404th 0.37 0.29 0.34

Total $ 2.38 $ 1.66 $ 2.00

Net Sales Outside the United States as a Percentage of Sales

2004 2003 2002

Agriculture & Nutrition 55% 53% 51%Coatings & Color Technologies 68 66 61Electronic & Communication Technologies 64 58 57Performance Materials 59 58 54Safety & Protection 40 39 39Textiles & Interiors 57 55 52

Total 57% 55% 53%

Exports from the United States

2004 2003 2002

Net sales (dollars in millions) $6,393 $5,226 $4,519As a percentage of net sales 23% 19% 19%

Selected Additional Data (dollars in millions, except per share)

Corporate Financial Data

Page 15: du pont 2004 Data Book

| 13

DuPont Sales Volume – Worldwide DuPont Local Selling Prices – Worldwide

Selling Price % Change from Prior Year

Year WorldwideUSD Local

2000 (1) 22001 (2) 02002 (2) (3)2003 5 02004 5 2

Sales Volume % Change from Prior Year*

Year Worldwide

2000 32001 (8)2002 62003 42004 6

2004 Selling Price %Change from Prior Year

Qtr WorldwideUSD Local

1st 6 12nd 4 13rd 6 34th 7 4Year 5 2

2004 Sales Volume % Change from Prior Year

Qtr Worldwide

1st 72nd 73rd 74th 5Year 6

Price and Volume* Change Summary

Index 4qma (1999=100 Right)Yr/Yr % Change (Left)

-10

-8

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

90

100

105

95

110

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Index 4qma (1999=100 Right)Yr/Yr % Change (Left)

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

97

98

99

100

101

102

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

* Price and volume changes are as a percentage of net sales excluding Textiles & Interiors. Volume percentage changes are calculated using sales adjusted to exclude current-year salesfrom acquisitions when there are no comparable prior-year sales and to exclude prior-year sales of businesses that have been divested.

Selected Additional Data

Page 16: du pont 2004 Data Book

14 | DUPONT 20 04

Throughout its history, DuPont has been guidedby a well-defined set of core values that haveremained constant as DuPont grew from itsorigins as an explosives company to the globalscience company it is today. Safety and health,environmental stewardship, high ethical standards,and respectful treatment of people remain thevalues of DuPont. They are practiced everywherethe company does business. All our operationsaround the world are held to the same standards.

We summarize here our progress on major safety,health and environmental incidents and globalgreenhouse emissions. Detailed economic,environmental and social performance data is available in the Global Reporting Initiativeformat, on the Social Commitment page ofwww.dupont.com.

2004 was the fifth full year of implementation ofDuPont Six Sigma across the company. We areseeing the impact of our efforts in both thegrowing number of employees trained and in thefinancial results from projects in all businesses,regions, and functions. We have trained over18,000 employees as either Master Black Belts,Black Belts, or Green Belts. Projects completed in2004 alone have delivered over $775 million inpretax annualized benefits. In 2004, we beganexpanding Six Sigma projects to improve enterprisewide end-to-end processes such as supply chain.

Manufacturing Operations ImprovementsTransactional Processes/Top Line Growth

Reduced CostsOpportunities for Increased Revenue

55%

74% 26%

45%

Projects

Benefits

20

0

1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003e 2004

15

10

5

Major Safety, Health and Environmental Incidents

A major safety, health and environmental incident is a significant fire, environmental,process or transportation incident.

200

250

0

1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003

50

100

150

Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Data indicate a 72% reduction of greenhouse gas emissions (Kyoto basket of gases)on a billion-pound basis since 1990, surpassing the DuPont goal to achieve a 65%reduction (Kyoto basis) by the year 2010.

Six Sigma Six Sigma Focus

DuPont Core Values: Safety, Health, and the Environment

Page 17: du pont 2004 Data Book

| 15

The New DuPont

In April 2004 DuPont divested INVISTA, its fibers and related intermediates businesses. The charts presented on this page present

selected information for DuPont excluding Textiles & Interiors.

2004 Sales by Major Industry (% of total company)

2004 Net Sales by Region

Aero

spac

e/Ai

rcra

ftAg

ricul

ture

/Foo

dCh

emic

al/P

etro

chem

ical

Cons

truct

ion/

Mat

eria

lsEl

ectri

cal A

pplia

nces

Elec

trica

l Mac

hine

ry

Elec

troni

csHo

me

Furn

ishin

gsM

otor

Veh

icle

Pape

r

Plas

tics

Text

ile/A

ppar

el

Min

ing

Pers

onal

Car

eHe

alth

Car

eOt

her–

Pack

agin

gOt

her–

Indu

stria

l

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

Geographic Information 2004 2003 2002

Net % of Net Net % of Net % ofSales Total Property Sales Total Sales Total

United States $10,684 42% $ 7,160 $ 9,555 45% $ 8,809 47%Western Europe 6,410 26 1,526 5,336 25 4,389 24Eastern Europe, Middle East & Africa 1,112 4 69 848 4 780 4Asia Pacific (excluding Greater China) 2,785 11 261 2,053 9 1,792 10Greater China 1,364 5 245 1,037 5 772 4Canada & Latin America 2,877 12 948 2,493 12 2,053 11

Total $25,232 100% $10,209 $21,322 100% $18,595 100%

Primary Uses

a. Natural Gas ...................... Variousb. Ethane ............................... Packaging Polymersc. Titanium Ores .................. Titanium Technologiesd. Electricity ......................... Variouse. Adipic Acid ...................... Engineering Polymersf. Pigments .......................... Performance Coatingsg. HMD .................................. Engineering Polymersh. Chlorine ............................ Titanium Technologiesi. Solvents ............................ Performance Coatingsj. DMT .................................. Packaging Polymersk. Methacrylates ................. Variousl. Chloroform ....................... Flouroproductsm. Herbicides ........................ Crop Protectionn. Isocyanates ..................... Performance Coatingso. Solid Resins ..................... Performance Coatings

a

b

c

d

e

f

ghi

jk

lm

no

Total Variable Cost of Goods Top Purchased Energy and Raw Materials(for scale only)

(dollars in millions)

Page 18: du pont 2004 Data Book

16 | DUPONT 20 04

DuPont Science & Technology provides technologies and transformational options fornew and existing businesses, building upon a long, rich legacy of leading scienceand successful commercialization. We generate growth by connecting our technologyto unmet needs in the global marketplace. Our focus is on creating and commercializingsolutions based on technical uniqueness. Nearly 800 new products were launched in2004 with strong representation from all five Growth Platforms.

DuPont Science & Technology

Thomas M. ConnellySenior Vice Presidentand Chief Science &Technology Officer

U.S. Patent Filings Globalization of DuPont R&D — New Research and ProductDevelopment Laboratories

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Patent Filings/R&D $

75

100

125

150

175

200

225

250

20042003200220012000

Index: '00 = 100

Payoff: Sales From New Products

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

20042003200220012000

Dollars in millions

DuPont R&D Revitalization

Kingston, Ontario Canada 1955

Mechelen, Netherlands 1959

Meyrin, Switzerland 1989

Utsunomiya, Japan 1998

Wupperthal, Germany 1999

Shanghai, China 2005

Seoul, South Korea 2005

Nagoya, Japan 2005

Page 19: du pont 2004 Data Book

| 17

Key Competencies Key Deliverables Key MarketsChemistry New Products Agriculture & NutritionBiology Improved Products Coatings & Color Materials Science IP & Technology Electronics & CommunicationEngineering & Design New Processes Performance Materials

Global Reach Safety & Protection

Leveraging Science Across Multiple Markets

Bio-Based Materials

By integrating DuPont strengths in materials development, microbial biology, genetics, andmetabolic engineering, Bio-Based Materials develops and commercializes novel materials withsuperior functionality that offer significant growth potential. Our newest polymer platform, Sorona®,uses a low cost biological route based on corn sugar to make the key ingredient Bio-PDO™. In2004, a joint venture with Tate & Lyle was formed to construct the first commercial-scale plant tomanufacture Bio-PDO™. This new plant will begin production in 2006.

Sorona® is the starting point for our commercialization of Bio-Based Materials. Our focus is onopportunities that biology can solve better than chemistry. An example from our pipeline is theIntegrated Corn Bio Refinery project. Sponsored by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory,this project targets the world’s first integrated “bio-refinery” using renewable resources to producea host of valuable fuels and value-added chemicals. Also in early stage development, our scientistsare applying biology to electronics by using the properties of DNA to sort carbon nanotubes, apotential first step toward producing smaller, faster electronic devices.

Chemistry

Biology

Materials Science

Engineering &Design

Aeros

pace

Agricu

lture

/Food

Chem

/Pet

roch

emCo

nstru

ction

Elect

ronic

sM

otor

Veh

icle

Pape

r

Plas

tics

Texti

les/A

ppar

elPe

rson

al Ca

re

Health

Car

e

Biotechnology is helping turn corn into highperformance polymers today, and alternativefuels tomorrow. | Smaller, faster, more powerful – biological screening and researchtools may enable electronic advances.

Page 20: du pont 2004 Data Book

18 | DUPONT 20 04

Dean C. OestreichPresident Pioneer Hi-BredInternational, Inc.

Tony ArnoldPresident & CEOThe Solae Company

James C. CollinsVice President/General ManagerDuPont Crop Protection

Douglas W. MuzykaVice President/General ManagerDuPont Nutrition & Health

Overview (dollars in millions)

2004 2003 2002

Segment sales $6,247 $5,470 $4,516Less transfers _ – –Less equity affiliate sales (79) (151) (177)

Net sales 6,168 5,319 4,339

Pretax operating income 766 669 462Pretax operating income – before special items 800 605 502Research and development 549 510 470Depreciation and amortization 434 425 367Equity in earnings of affiliates (4) (7) (6)Provision for income taxes 99 123 15

Segment net assets 6,318 6,508 5,965Affiliate net assets 38 33 114Expenditures for long-lived assets 238 593 228

2004 Segment Sales Data

Growth Platform Leaders

By Major Product Group

Corn seeds 31%

Other 5%

Soybean 8%

Insecticides 6%

Herbicides 23%

Other Seeds 4%

Fungicides 5%

Food Ingredients 18%

By Major Industry

Food Packaging & Safety 4%

Seeds 42%

Food Ingredients 18%

Crop Protection 36%

By Region

Europe 25%

North America 51%

Asia Pacific 10%

Latin America 14%

Increasing the quality, quantity, and safety of the global food supply by leveragingDuPont strengths in biology, chemistry, and biotechnology with our knowledge of the food value chain. The platform businesses hold a broad portfolio of brands suchas Pioneer® seeds, Solae™ soy protein, and Bax® pathogen screening, as well as recognized brands of insecticides, fungicides, and high-value, low-use-rate herbicides.Innovation targets address improving grower productivity and creating new innovativesources of food and feed ingredients, energy, and materials.

DuPont Agriculture & Nutrition

J. Erik FyrwaldGroup Vice President

Page 21: du pont 2004 Data Book

Key Capabilities Key Products & Services Core MarketsPlant genetics Seeds Production agricultureBiotechnology Traits Food processingCrop chemistry Crop protection chemicalsNutrition science Food ingredientsProtein formulation Food quality & safety

| 19

Acquisitions and Joint Ventures (2002-2004)

DuPont Farm Solutions – sales and marketing joint venture with Maruwa Kabushiki Kaisha established in Japan (2004)

Verdia, Inc. – California – Biotech research and development (2004)

Griffin, LLC – Georgia – crop protection products (2003 – acquired remaining interest of joint venture)

Solae, LLC – Missouri – soy-based consumer food products (2003 joint venture with Bunge, Ltd.)

DuPont Shineway Luohe Protein Co., Ltd. – China – soy protein plant to be built in 2003 (2002 – joint venture with Luohe Shineway IndustryGroup Co., Ltd.)

DuPont Zhengzhou Protein Co., Ltd. – China – soy protein isolates (2002 – acquisition)

Liqui-Box Corporation – Ohio – packaging systems for pumpable food products (2002 – acquisition)

Shandong Denghai Pioneer Seed Co., Ltd. – China – corn seed (2002 – joint venture with Denghai Seed Group)

Divestitures and Shutdowns (2002-2004)

DuPont Liquid Packaging Systems – production or warehouse shutdowns at Worthington OH, Houston TX, Elkton MD, and Allentown, PA (2004).

Crop Protection product lines divested: Turf and Ornamentals, Aquatics, and Propanil (2004)

Solae – Alpha production plant, New Berman, OH (2004)

Azafenidin (2002)

Crop protection – Loon-Plage, France (2002)

Hybrinova – Estrées Saint-Denis and Pouy, France (2002) hybrid wheat seed

Pioneer corn with Roundup Ready* andYield Gard* stacked traits

Pioneer corn with Poncho™ insect seedtreatment

Sulfonylurea (SU) blendsBiplay SX and Finish SXHarmony Extra SXHarmony M SXAffinity tank mix

Flusilazole fungicide

Alpha 12

Nutrium™ Low Lin Oil

DPEL Film

Recent Product Examples

Products/Services Innovation Markets Served

Stacked insect protection with resistance toglyphosate herbicide

Insect protection

Soluble granule herbicide blendsSoluble granule herbicide blendsSoluble granule herbicide blendsSoluble granule herbicide blends

Asian soybean rust

Functional soy protein concentrate

Low linolenic soybean oil

Verticle form fill sealing

North American corn market

North American corn market

UK cereals marketUK cereals marketUK cereals marketUK cereals market

Argentina

Global meat industry

Global food industry

Global beverage industry

*Roundup Ready and Yield Gard are registered trademarks of Monsanto

Page 22: du pont 2004 Data Book

20 | DUPONT 20 04

Crop Protection www.dupont.com/ag

HerbicidesCorn herbicides:

Accent® and Accent® Broadleaf weed control Mobile, AL Aminodimethoxypyrimidine BASFGoldTM Grassy weed control El Paso, IL Cyanuric chloride Bayer

Basis® and Basis® Gold® Manati, PR Monomethylamine Dow AgrosciencesCATD Cernay, France Nicotinic acid MonsantoCinch SyngentaCinch ATZCinch ATZ LiteSteadfast®

Steadfast® ATZTitus®

Soybean herbicides:Assure® II Broadleaf weed control El Paso, IL GuanidineAuthority® Selective weed control Manati, PR Methyl thioglycolateCanopy® and Canopy® XLTM SaccharinClassic® SulfentrazoneReliance®

Synchrony® STS®

Cereal herbicides:Ally® Broadleaf weed control El Paso, IL Benzyl mercaptanExpress® Selective weed control Manati, PR CyanamideFinesse® Girraween, Australia Dimethyl carbonateGlean® Cernay, France Methyl thioglycolateGranstar® Surabaya, Indonesia SaccharinHarmony®

Lexus®

Muster®

SU Blends

Rice herbicides:Gulliver® Selective pre- and Manati, PR AminodimethoxypyrimidineLondax® postemergence weed Shanghai, China o-Toluic acid

control

Cotton herbicides:Staple® Postemergence weed Lerma, Mexico GlyphosateStaple® PlusTM control Pyrithiobac sodium

Potato herbicides:Matrix® Selective broadleaf weed Cernay, France Aminodimethoxypyrimidine

and grass control

Sugar beet herbicides:Debut® Postemergence weed Manati, PR 2-Carbomethoxy-Safari® control Cernay, France 6-methylbenzenesulfonyl Upbeet® chlorideVenzar®

Sugarcane herbicides:Advance® Preemergence LaPorte, TX DiuronVelpar® K weed control Hexazinone

Citrus herbicides:Hyvar® Preemergence LaPorte, TX BromacilKrovar® weed control Diuron

Tomato herbicides:Shadeout® Selective weed control Cernay, France Aminodimethoxypyrimidine

Specialty herbicides:Vegetation management Brush and weed control LaPorte, TX Cyclohexyl isocyanate

(forestry and noncrop) Manati, PR Dichlorophenol isocyanateOust® and Velpar® Lerma, Mexico HexazinoneOustarTM Saccharin

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

DuPont Agriculture & Nutrition

Page 23: du pont 2004 Data Book

| 21

Crop Protection (continued)

FungicidesCurzate® Plant disease control Valdosta, GA Carbon bisulfide BASFEquation® Houston, TX Carbon monoxide BayerFamoxate® Barranguiela, Colombia Chlorine Dow AgrosciencesFlusilazole Cernay, France Copper hydrofide SyngentaKocide® Bolzano, Italy EDA Ethylene diamineManzate® Asturias, Spain Phenyl hydrazineNustar® Lung Tan, Taiwan Sodium triazolePunch® Bangpoo, Thailand TriphenyltinhydroxideSuper TINTanosTM

InsecticidesAsana® Direct control and Mobile, AL Acetaldoxime BayerAvauntTM residual action LaPorte, TX Ammonia Dow AgrosciencesLannate® insect control Cernay, France Caustic soda SyngentaSteward® Savli, India m-CresolVendex® Bolzano, Italy CyclohexanoneVydate® Lerma, Mexico Methanol

Cabuyao, Philippines Methyl mercaptanLung Tan, Taiwan MonochlorobenzeneBangpoo, Thailand Monoethylamine

MonomethylformamidePhosphorus pentachlorideTrichloroacetaldehyde

Nutrition & Health

Solae LLC www.solae.com www.solaeliving.comSOLAETM , Alpha 12 Food industry Gibson City, IL Soybeans, soybean flake Food and grain

and SUPRO® isolated Remington, IN and soybean meal ingredient companies soy protein Bellevue, OH and meat, milk, and

Soy protein concentrates New Bermen, OH egg producersand oils Pryor, OK

Memphis, TNleper, BelgiumEsteio, BrazilLuohe, ChinaYun Meng, ChinaZhengzhou, ChinaAarthus, DenmarkBordeaux, FranceTokyo, JapanCorby, United Kingdom

PRO-COTE® isolated Paper industry Louisville, KY Soybean flake and Starch and latex soy protein soybean meal companies

Qualicon Inc. www.qualicon.comBAX® system for Food, personal care, Wilmington, DE Microbiological testing

pathogen screening and pharmaceutical and instrumentationRiboPrinter® microbial companies

characterization system

8th Continent LLC www.8thcontinent.com8th ContinentTM soymilk Food & beverage industry Minneapolis, MN SolaeTM isolated Food and beverage

soy protein companies andmilk producers

DuPont Food Industry Solutions www.dfis.dupont.comService business offering

technology based solutions for:- Improved productivity Food & beverage industry Wilmington, DE- Product/process

innovation- Product quality

DuPont Agriculture & Nutrition

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

Page 24: du pont 2004 Data Book

22 | DUPONT 20 04

Nutrition & Health (continued)

Liqui-Box Pasteurized and aseptic Beverage and pumpable Ontario, CA Polyethylene Scholle

packaging systems liquid food packaging Sacramento, CA Nylon RapakRigid blow molded Film converters Lake Wales, FL Polyester Consolidated Containers

containers and filling Industrial packaging Elkton, MD Polycarbonate Cryovacequipment Auburn, MA

High barrier sealant Ashland, OHstructures for aseptic Upper Sandusky, OHpouch/bag applications Worthington, OH

Fitments, connectors Houston, TXand taps Toronto, Canada

Dartek® nylon films Manchester, EnglandSclairfilm® sealant films Paris, FranceVexar® netting Savli, India

Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc. www.pioneer.com

Alfalfa seed Farming industry Woodland, CA Genes BayerCanola seed Feed industry Waialu, HI Germplasm Dow AgrosciencesCorn seed Food industry Algona, IA Parent seed MonsantoInoculant Cherokee, IA SyngentaSorghum seed Durant, IASoybean seed Hedrick, IASunflower seed Marengo, IAWheat seed Mt. Pleasant, IA

Reinbeck, IARenwick, IAToledo, IANampa, IDGood Hope, ILLe Roy, ILLitchfield, ILMcLeansboro, ILPrinceton, ILSt. Joseph, ILWoodhull, ILPlymouth, INRushville, INTipton, INWorthington, INConstantine, MIJackson, MNLaurinburg, NCWahpeton, NDDoniphan, NEYork, NEGrand Rapids, OHPlainview, TXWeslaco, TXSalto, ArgentinaNarromine, AustraliaParndorf, AustriaItumbiara, BrazilSanta Cruz, BrazilSanta Rosa, BrazilChatham, CanadaLethbridge, CanadaPaine, ChileOsijek, CroatiaAussonne, FranceBuxtehude, GermanySzarvas, HungaryHyderabad, IndiaMalang, IndonesiaSissa, ItalyCuliacan, MexicoAfumati, RomaniaRosslyn, South AfricaLampoon, ThailandAdana, TurkeyJuru, Zimbabwe

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

DuPont Agriculture & Nutrition

Page 25: du pont 2004 Data Book

The DuPont Coatings & Color Technologies platform mission is to leverage DuPonttechnology and knowledge of the titanium dioxide, coatings and ink jet businesses to create added value for customers by increasing their productivity, delivering innovative high performance products, and enabling higher quality service and valueto their customers. Our offering includes coatings, ingredients, systems and servicesto fulfill functionality, aesthetics and process needs. Key strategic opportunities include expanding the platform leadership position in environmentally safe solutions,broadening digital ink technology for textiles and photographic uses, and strengtheningour presence in the Asia Pacific and Eastern European markets.

DuPont Coatings & Color Technologies

Edward J. DonnellyGroup Vice President

| 23

Sam W. SeveranceVice President /General ManagerDuPont TitaniumTechnologies

Douglas L. MooreVice President /General ManagerDuPont AdvancedCoatings Systems

Eric G. MelinVice President /General ManagerDuPont Refinish

Marty M. McQuadeVice President /General ManagerDuPont Automotive Systems

Overview (dollars in millions)

2004 2003 2002

Segment sales $6,028 $5,503 $5,026Less transfers (57) (52) (41)Less equity affiliate sales (46) (71) (109)

Net sales 5,925 5,380 4,876

Pretax operating income 718 735 760Pretax operating income – before special items 814 731 826Research and development 150 132 133Depreciation and amortization 209 227 196Equity in earnings of affiliates 3 3 (3)Provision for income taxes 240 253 272

Segment net assets 3,761 3,641 3,235Affiliate net assets 17 46 41Expenditures for long-lived assets 217 214 298

2004 Segment Sales Data

Growth Platform Leaders

By Major Product Group

OEM 21%

Refinish 30%

White Pigments 32%

Other 17%

By Major Industry

Construction/Materials 29%

Plastics 8%

Paper 5%

Other 6%

Motor Vehicle 52%

By Region

Europe 41%

North America 40%

Asia Pacific 14%

South America 5%

Page 26: du pont 2004 Data Book

Key Capabilities Key Products & Services Core MarketsDispersion and particle technologies Titanium dioxide Automotive OEMColorants, color management Liquid and powder coatings Collision repairCoatings application Digital inks PaperManufacturing excellence Consulting services Industrial coatingsGlobal scale and scope Digital printing

Architectural coatingsPlastics

24 | DUPONT 20 04

Acquisitions and Joint Ventures (2002-2004)

POL-SVER Lakiery Proszkowe Sp. zo.o – Poland – powder coatings (2004)

Remaining interest in DuPont Turkiye joint venture – Turkey – automotive, refinish, and industrial coatings (2004)

DuPont Red Lion – China – OEM and refinish joint venture (2003)

DuPont Performance Coatings, S.A. – Brazil – automotive and industrial coatings (2002 – acquisition of remaining interest in Renner Herrmannjoint venture)

Divestitures and Shutdowns (2002-2004)

Manufacturing plants in Cologne and Helmstedt – Germany (2003)

Powder Plant in Burogo – Germany (2003)

Generation™IX Powder clearcoat

EcoConcept™ Waterborne System

TS-6200 TiO2 pigment

Imron® Elite Single Stage Base Coats andClear Coats

ChromaBase® YB System

SDP Black Ink concentrate

Artistri™ Series 700 inks

Alesta® HT Powder Coatings

Recent Product Examples

Products/Services Innovation Markets Served

Improved scratch & mar resistance

Waterborne primerless system for OEM assembly plants

Superior durability for environmentally demandingapplications

Improved appearance and productivity

Integrated paint system delivering productivity,value, and ease of use.

Enhanced optical density for plain paper applications

Broad portfolio of inks with superior fastnessand choice of substrate.

Resist temperatures up to 1000°F

Automotive OEM Market

Automotive OEM Market

High performance coatings – Automotive &Industrial

Heavy Duty Truck Coatings

Automotive Refinish

Desktop Ink Jet Printing

Textile Printing for home furnishings andapparel

BBQ Grills, Fireplace inserts, exhaust systems.

Page 27: du pont 2004 Data Book

DuPont Coatings & Color Technologies

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

| 25

DuPont Performance Coatings www.performancecoatings.dupont.com

Centari® automotive and Aerospace Fort Madison, IA Acrylic monomers Akzo Nobelrefinish enamels Automotive Mount Clemens, MI Aliphatic and aromatic BASF

ChromaBase® refinish Collision repair Front Royal, VA hydrocarbon solvents PPGsystem Marine Guntramsdorf, Austria Organic pigments Sherwin-Williams

Cormax® electrodeposition Transportation Mechelen, Belgium Titanium dioxideprimers Sao Paulo, Brazil

Cromax® waterborne Ajax, Canadafinishes LeMans, France

Hot HuesTM Refinish System Wuppertal, GermanyImron® finishes Tlalnepantla, MexicoNason® refinish Valencia, VenezuelaSpies Hecker® refinishStandox® refinish

DuPont inks for printer Digital ink jet Fort Madison, IA AveciaOEMs printers Rochester, NY CIBA Industrial Coating

FusionTM large format Commercial printing Sensientinks systems

ArtistriTM inks and printing Textilessystems

Permatex® industrial Protective coatings Vaihingen, Germany Hempel coatings Sigma Kalon

Voltro® high performancewire enamels

Alestra® Powder coatings Automotive Houston, TX Epoxy resins Akzo NobelRay-Tec® Powder Construction Montbrison, France Organic pigments Ferro

General industrial OEM Landshut, Germany Polyester MortonPipeline Bulle, Switzerland

Darlington, United Kingdom

DuPont Titanium Technologies www.titanium.dupont.com

Ferric chloride Airblasting Edge Moor, DE Chlorine HuntsmanStarblast® abrasives Ceramics Starke, FL Coke IshiharaTi-Pure® titanium dioxide Coatings DeLisle, MS Ilmenite Kemira OyZircon Foundries New Johnsonville, TN Rutile Kerr-McGee

Paper Uberaba, Brazil Kronos (NL Industries)Plastics Altamira, Mexico Millennium InorganicRefractories Kuan Yin, Taiwan Chemicals

Page 28: du pont 2004 Data Book

DuPont Electronic & Communication Technologies delivers innovative science to electronics, communication, and industrial markets worldwide. Our advanced materialsand technology enable increased functionality and lower costs for electronic andcommunication devices, flexographic printing and color communication for packagingand commercial printing industries, and superior electrical properties, thermal performance, chemical inertness, and surface characteristics for flouro-enabled markets. Emerging technologies in our development pipeline include embedded passiveelectronic components, low loss laminate materials for semiconductor packages,polymers for 193 nm photoresists, thermal color filters for LCD displays, limited combustible cable for electronic data and telecommunications, organic light emittingdiode (OLED) displays, and fuel cell membrane electrode assemblies.

DuPont Electronic & Communication Technologies

Craig G. NaylorGroup Vice President

26 | DUPONT 20 04

Barry M. GrangerVice President/General ManagerDuPont ImagingTechnologies

David B. MillerVice President/General ManagerDuPont ElectronicTechnologies

David G. BillsVice President/General ManagerDuPont Fluoroproducts

Overview (dollars in millions)

2004 2003 2002

Segment sales $3,279 $2,892 $2,540Less transfers (81) (40) (41)Less equity affiliate sales (284) (233) (211)

Net sales 2,914 2,619 2,288

Pretax operating income 192 183 287Pretax operating income – before special items 367 181 285Research and development 174 188 178Depreciation and amortization 149 156 136Equity in earnings of affiliates 29 8 10Provision for income taxes 51 35 69

Segment net assets 2,230 2,408 2,190Affiliate net assets 383 324 302Expenditures for long-lived assets 135 129 227

2004 Segment Sales Data

Growth Platform Leaders

By Major Product Group

Printing & Proofing 15%

Other 5%

Fluorosurfacing 7%

Fluoropolymers 20%

Refrigerants 13%

Chemical Specialties 7%

Electronic Materials 33%

By Major Industry

Electrical Appliances/Machinery 16%

Agriculture/Food 7%

Chemical/Petrochemical 7%

Electronics 25%

Wire & Cable 4%

Industrial Propellants 5%

Motor Vehicle 8%

Packaging 12%

Other 16%

By Region

Asia Pacific 32%

North America 39%

Europe 25%

South America 4%

Page 29: du pont 2004 Data Book

Key Capabilities Key Products & Services Core MarketsPolymer chemistry Semi-con fabrication & packaging materials SemiconductorsFluorine chemistry Circuit & component materials Printed circuit boards & componentsPhoto polymers Flexographic printing systems Automotive & industrial electronicsInorganic materials Refrigerants DisplaysPrecision patterning Surfacing materials Packaging & commercial printing

Wire & cable materials HVAC & refrigerationChemical processing industriesElectronic data & telecommunications

| 27

Acquisitions and Joint Ventures (2002-2004)

SD Flex – Korea – joint venture with Samsung-Cheil for adhesiveless, flexible copper clad laminates (2004)

DuPont 3F Fluorochemicals – China – joint venture for manufacture of blended HFC refrigerants (2004)

ChemFirst, Inc. – United States, United Kingdom, and Japan – integrated circuit fabrication materials (2002 – acquisition)

Merrimac Industries, Inc. – New Jersey – design, simulation, prototyping, and manufacture of multilayer high-frequency modules (2002 – minority investment)

Polar Vision Inc. – California – LCD enhancement (2001 – 65% joint venture; 2002 – 100%-owned affiliate)

Divestitures and Shutdowns (2002-2004)

Transfer of the EKC CMP business to the DuPont Air Products Nanomaterial joint venture (2004).

Propellants manufacture – Louisville, KY (2003)

Refrigerants production – Shimizu, Japan (2003)

Teflon® PFA951HP Plus

Teflon® FEP 9469

Cyrel®FAST

Interra® planar embedded capacitor laminate

DuPont™ Cromalin® b2

5th generation Fodel®

Solamet® photovoltaic conductor materials

BQ series biosensor materials

Mazin® SR310

Ascend™ Cu300

Recent Product Examples

Products/Services Innovation Markets Served

High purity fluid handling resin with dramaticallylower permeation

High speed cable extrusion resin with improvedproductivity

Thermally processed digital flexographic printingplate

Embedded passives

Low cost, high-quality inkjet system

Silver conductor offering lower resistance, finerlines and high quality

Metallization for solar cell applications offeringimproved printing and higher cell efficiency

Improved accuracy in testing blood glucose levels

Low solids, chelating additive slurry

Advanced step 1 CMP slurry for bulk copperremoval

Semiconductor, Pharmaceutical

Electronic data & telecom cables

Packaging graphics printing

Back plane panel for high frequency telecom and datacom applications

Commercial printing

Plasma display panels

Solar cells

Blood glucose testing

Silicone wafer polishing

Semiconductor fabrication

Page 30: du pont 2004 Data Book

28 | DUPONT 20 04

DuPont Display Technologies www.dupont.com/displays

Holographic optical Flat-panel displays Santa Barbara, CA Adhesives Kodakelements Personal and Torrance, CA FV polymer 3M

Liquid crystal display (LCD) product security/ Bridgeport, CT Glass White Electronicsenhancement solutions authentication Towanda, PA N10 monomer

Security and authentication Logan, UT Plastic filmssolutions

DuPont Electronic Technologies www.dupont.com/et

Birox® thick film resistor Automotive Hayward, CA Copper Air Productscompositions electronics Research Triangle Park, NC Hydroxylamine Asahi Chemical

Fodel® thick film photo- Biosensors Parlin, NJ Oxydianiline Cabot Microelectronicsprintable compositions Displays Circleville, OH Polyester film Cookson

Green TapeTM Electronic Dayton, OH Precious metals Eternal Chemicallow-temperature components Towanda, PA Pyromellitic dianhydride Ferroco-fired ceramic Electronic insulation Bayport, TX Hitachi Chemical

ImageMasterTM photo- Integrated circuit Manati, PR Honeywelltooling films fabrication Dongguan, China Kaneka

Interra® planar embedded Integrated circuit Shenzhen, China MacDermidcapacitor laminate packaging Mizushima, Japan Rohm & Haas

Kapton® polyimide film Printed circuit board Tokai, Japan ShoeiLuxprint® electroluminescent fabrication Toyohashi, Japan Sumitomo

compositions Telecommunications Ichon, Korea Taiyo InkMazin® colloidal silica slurry Luxembourg UbeMicrocircuit materials Hsinchu, TaiwanMicroplanar® chemical Taoyuan, Taiwan

mechanical planarization Bristol, United Kingdomformulations East Kilbride, United Kingdom

Oasis® composite film Ruabon, United KingdomPlasmaSolv® etch

residue removersPolymers for IC photoresistsPosistrip® photoresist

removersPyralin® polyimide coatingsPyralux® flexible laminatesRexon® flexible laminatesRiston® dry film photoresistsSolamet® silver

compositions for solar cellsSyton® colloidal silica slurryTeclam® flexible laminatesThermount® non-woven

aramid laminates

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

DuPont Electronic & Communication Technologies

Page 31: du pont 2004 Data Book

| 29

DuPont Fluorochemicals www.dupont.com/dymel www.dupont.com/fire www.dupont.com/formacel www.dupont.com/suva www.dupont.com/vertrel www.dupont.com/zyron

Dymel® aerosol propellants Aerosol propellants Louisville, KY Chloroform Air ProductsFETM fire extinguishants Electronic gasses Deepwater, NJ Fluorspar ArkemaFormacel® blowing agents FE systems Corpus Christi, TX Hydrofluoric acid DaikinHCFC 22 refrigerants Insulation La Porte, TX Methanol Great LakesSuva® refrigerants Precision cleaning Belle, WV Perchloroethylene HoneywellVertrel® cleaning agents Refrigeration/HVAC Changshu, China VCM INEOS Zyron® electronic gases Pharmaceuticals Chiba, Japan KDK

Shimizu, Japan Solexis (formerly Solvay)Dordrecht, 3M

The NetherlandsHumberside,

United Kingdom

DuPont Fluoropolymer Solutions www.teflon.com www.dupont.com/tedlar

Nafion® ion exchange Aerospace Parlin, NJ Difluoroethane Akzo Nobelmembranes Automotive Buffalo, NY HCFC 22 Asahi Glass

Tedlar® PVF film Chemical handling Fayetteville, NC hydrochlorofluorocarbon DaikinTeflon® fluoropolymer and processing Circleville, OH Dyneon/3MTeflon® and Autograph® Data communications Parkersburg, WV Solexis (formerly Solvay)

nonstick coatings Fine Chemicals Mechelen, Belgium Whitford Worldwidefor cookware Housewares Shenzhen, China

Teflon® for industrial Semiconductor Shimizu, Japancoating applications manufacture Dordrecht,

Teflon® films Photovoltaics The NetherlandsTefzel® fluoropolymer Construction

DuPont Imaging Technologies www.dupont.com/cyrel www.dupont.com/proofing

Cyrel®, Digital Cyrel®, Commercial printing Parlin, NJ Block copolymers AgfaCyrel®FAST flexographic Packaging graphics Towanda, PA HMDA/HMDMA Asahi Chemicalprinting plates, and Cyrel® Flat Panel Displays Neu Isenburg, Germany Polyester films CVC (BASF)round printing sleeves Fuji

Cromalin®, Dylux®, Thermal KPG/Imation4-Color, WaterProof® MacDermidproofing systems, andCromalin® b2 and CromaProTM XP inkjet color proofing systems

DuPont Electronic & Communication Technologies

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

Page 32: du pont 2004 Data Book

30 | DUPONT 20 04

Craig F. BinettiVice President/General ManagerDuPont Packaging &Industrial Polymers

Henry B. VoigtChairman & Chief Executive OfficerDuPont Teijin Films

John R. LewisPresident & CEODuPont DowElastomers

Terry CaloghirisVice President/General ManagerDuPont EngineeringPolymers

Overview (dollars in millions)

2004 2003 2002

Segment sales $6,633 $5,376 $4,926Less transfers (102) (133) (94)Less equity affiliate sales (876) (1,143) (1,073)

Net sales 5,655 4,100 3,759

Pretax operating income 295 410 771Pretax operating income – before special items 630 410 683Research and development 141 126 124Depreciation and amortization 234 161 175Equity in earnings of affiliates (100) 9 33Provision for income taxes 168 143 283

Segment net assets 3,717 3,806 3,283Affiliate net assets 773 1,201 1,203Expenditures for long-lived assets 214 167 139

2004 Segment Sales Data

Growth Platform Leaders

By Major Product Group

Engineering Resins 40%

Packaging Resins 12%

Other 19%

Elastomers 10%

Polyester Films 11%

Vinyl Polymers 8%

By Major Industry

Electrical & Electronics 8%

Construction/Materials 10%

Agriculture/Food 7%

Other 13%

Packaging 16%

Personal & Health Care 8%

Motor Vehicle 38%

By Region

Europe 29%

North America 45%

Asia Pacific 24%

South America 2%

Material innovations for a more secure, comfortable, and sustainable world: TheDuPont Performance Materials businesses provide customers with more productive,higher performance polymer materials and system solutions to improve the uniqueness,functionality, and profitability of their product offering. Key growth opportunities includedeveloping new automotive applications both under the hood and on the vehicle body,enhancing consumer packaging solutions, and expanding our presence in Asia Pacific.

DuPont Performance Materials

Jeffrey L. KeeferGroup Vice President

Page 33: du pont 2004 Data Book

Key Capabilities Key Products & Services Core MarketsPolymer science Engineering polymers AutomotiveApplication development Flexible packaging resins PackagingMaterials processing Industrial resins Electrical/electronics

Performance elastomers ConstructionPerformance films Consumer durables

| 31

Acquisitions and Joint Ventures (2002-2004)(2002-2004)

Retrim – Czech Republic – PVB Interlayer Manufacturer (2004)

Eastman Chemicals high performance crystalline polymers – LCP and PCT polymers (2003)

DuPont Teijin Hongii Films Ningbo Co. Ltd. – China – polyester film (2003 – joint venture)

Wuxi Xingda Nylon Co. Ltd. – Wuxi, China – nylon filaments (2004 – joint venture)

Asahi Kasei Corporation – China – polyacetal resins manufacturing (2002 – joint venture)

Divestitures and Shutdowns (2002-2004) (2002-2004)

DMT Manufacturing – Old Hickory, TN (2004)

Zytel-Delrin – Tuas, Singapore – Compounding facility (2003)

Zytel® and Minlon® Nylon resins – Born and Rozenburg, Netherlands (2003)

Clysar® polyolefin shrink film – Clinton, Iowa, and LeTrait, France (2002)

Showa DDE Manufacturing K.K. – Kawasaki, Japan – neoprene synthetic rubber joint venture (2002)

Zytel® Advantage resins

Zytel® HTN FR52GxxBL

Hytrel® Membranes

Hytrel® Blow Molding resins

Pipelon® 401

SentryGlas® Expressions

Appeel® resins

Elvax® & Surlyn® resins

Butacite® G

Recent Product Examples

Products/Services Innovation Markets Served

Improved melt flow, mold deposit, and physicalproperties that increase customer productivity

High temperature, flame resistant, and lowwarpage polyamide resins

Waterproof, breathable membranes with highmoisture vapor transmission and UV stability

Integrated blow molding technology for partsrequiring rigid and flexible segments

High inherent viscosity, heat-stabilized 6-12polyamide extrusion resin

Digital image quality in durable laminated glassapplications

Controlled adhesion for easy open packages

Encapsulate and protect photovoltaic cells

Interlayers with recycled PVB for laminated glass

Automotive, Consumer

Automotive, Electronics

Textile, Construction

Automotive, Transportation

Oil & Gas

Automotive & Architectural

Food & Beverage

Solar power

Architectural & Automotive

Page 34: du pont 2004 Data Book

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

DuPont Performance Materials

32 | DUPONT 20 04

DuPont Engineering Polymers www.plastic.dupont.com

Crastin® PBT polyester Aerospace Newark, DE Butadiene BASFresins Appliance Circleville, OH Butanediol Celanese/Ticona

Delrin® acetal resins Automotive Cleveland, OH Caprolactam GE PlasticsHytrel® polyester Cosmetics Charleston, SC Cyclohexane Lanxess

elastomer Industrial hardware Chattanooga, TN Dodecanedioic acid PolyplasticsRynite® PET polyester Electrical/Electronics Richmond, VA Ethylene glycol Solutia

resins Power tools Parkersburg, WV Glass fiber Solvay PolymersThermx® PCT polyester Recreational goods Berazategui, Argentina Methanol TeijinTynex® nylon filaments Semiconductor and Mechelen, Belgium Oxydianiline TorayVespel® parts and shapes business machines Kingston, Canada Para-hydroxybenzoic acidZeniteTM LCP (liquid crystal Maitland, Canada Paraxylene

polymer) resins Shenzhen, China Polytetramethylene glycolZytel® and Minlon® nylon Wuxi, China Pyromellitic dianhydride

resins Zhangjigang, ChinaUentrop, GermanyMadurai, IndiaSavli, IndiaUtsunomiya, JapanLuxembourgTlalnepantla, MexicoDordrecht, The NetherlandsLandgraaf, The NetherlandsUlsan, Republic of KoreaSingapore

DuPont Packaging & Industrial Polymers www.dupont.com/industrial-polymers www.dupont.com/packaging www.dupont.com/safetyglass

Cool2GoTM insulated wrap Adhesives Fayetteville, NC Acetic acid Air ProductsCrystar® specialty resin Construction Old Hickory, TN Acrylic acid DowDimethyl terephthalate (DMT) Food and beverage LaPorte, TX Butyraldehyde Eastman ChemicalElvaloy® AC acrylate Leisure/sporting goods Orange, TX Ethylene Elf Atochem

resins (EMA, EEA, EBA Packaging Victoria, TX Ethylene glycol Equistarcopolymers) Textiles Parkersburg, WV Methacrylic acid ExxonMobil

Elvanol® polyvinyl alcohol Transportation Sarnia, Canada Paraxylene HT Troplastresins Wire and cable Uentrop, Germany Kosa

Ethylene copolymers: Chiba, Japan KurarayBynel® coextrudable Otake, Japan Sekisui

adhesive Ulsan, Republic of Korea SolutiaElvaloy® polymer modifiers Dordrecht,Elvax® ethylene vinyl The Netherlands

acetate resins Zlin, Czech RepublicNucrel® acid copolymer

resinsSurlyn® resinsVamac® ethylene acrylic

elastomerGlass laminating products:

Butacite® polyvinylbutyral interlayer

SentryGlas® ExpressionsTM

decorative interlayersSentryGlas® intrusion

resistant compositeSentryGlas® Plus

security interlayerSentryGlas® SecureTM

ionoplast interlayer

Page 35: du pont 2004 Data Book

DuPont Performance Materials

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

| 33

DuPont Teijin Films www.dupontteijinfilms.com

Cronar® polyester Appliance Fayetteville, NC Dimethyl terephthalate Mitsubishiphotographic film base Automotive Circleville, OH (DMT) SKC

Melinex® polyester film Construction Florence, SC Ethylene glycol TorayMylar® polyester film Data storage Old Hickory, TN Purified terephthalic acid ToyoboPurex® polyester film Electronics Hopewell, VA (PTA)Teijin® Tetoron® Flat panel displays Richmond, VA 2,6NDC

polyester film Imaging Foshan, ChinaTeonex® PEN film Medical and healthcare Ningbo, China

Packaging and labels Jakarta, IndonesiaPrint consumables Gifu, JapanVideo tape Ibaraki, Japan

Utsunomiya, JapanLuxembourgRozenburg,

The NetherlandsDumfries, United KingdomWilton, United Kingdom

DuPont Dow Elastomers www.dupont-dow.com

Engage® polyolefin Adhesives Newark, DE Butadiene Daikinelastomer Aerospace Louisville, KY Chlorine DenkaHypalon® chlorosulfonated Automotive LaPlace, LA Ethylene DSMpolyethylene Chemical processing Plaquemine, LA Hydrofluoric acid Dyneon/3M

Kalrez® perfluoroelastomer Construction Deepwater, NJ Octene Enichemparts Plastics modification Beaumont, TX Perfluoromethylvinyl Exxon/Mobil

Neoprene synthetic Semiconductor Freeport, TX ether Lanxessrubber Wire and cable Stade, Germany Polyethylene Solvay Solexis

Nordel® hydrocarbon Dordrecht, Propylenerubber The Netherlands

Tyrin® chlorinated polyethyleneViton® fluoroelastomer

Page 36: du pont 2004 Data Book

34 | DUPONT 20 04

James A. ForsmanVice President/General ManagerDuPont SafetyResources

Richard C. OlsonVice President/General ManagerDuPont Surfaces

Susan M. StalneckerVice PresidentConsumer &Government

Nicholas C. FanandakisVice President/General ManagerDuPont ChemicalSolutions Enterprise

William J. HarveyVice President/General ManagerDuPont Advanced Fiber Systems

Mark P. VergnanoVice President/General ManagerDuPont Nonwovens

Overview (dollars in millions)

2004 2003 2002

Segment sales $4,693 $4,075 $3,479Less transfers (90) (122) (110)Less equity affiliate sales (64) (59) (55)

Net sales 4,539 3,894 3,314

Pretax operating income 840 807 757Pretax operating income – before special items 910 807 753Research and development 100 90 91Depreciation and amortization 179 173 156Equity in earnings of affiliates 13 14 10Provision for income taxes 277 271 268

Segment net assets 2,645 2,530 1,942Affiliate net assets 74 100 85Expenditures for long-lived assets 215 303 285

2004 Segment Sales Data

Growth Platform Leaders

By Major Product Group

Solid Surfaces 12%

Tyvek®/Typar® 20%

Other 2%

Performance & Protection Chemical Solutions 11%

Sontara® 5%

Industrial Chemical Solutions 27%

Aramids Products 23%

By Major Industry

Construction/Materials 19%

Textile/Apparel 21%

Motor Vehicle 4%

Electrical & Electronics 6%

Chemical/Petrochemical 21%

Personal & Health Care 7%

Other 22%

By Region

Europe 21%

North America 61%

Asia Pacific 15%

South America 3%

Building on the 200-year record of DuPont as one of the safest companies in theworld, DuPont Safety & Protection extends the company’s knowledge, technology and experience to deliver solutions that protect people, property, operations, and the environment. A portfolio of brands – including Kevlar®, Nomex®, Tyvek®, Oxone®,SafeReturns™, Corian®, and Zodiaq® – serve many markets, including the safety,security, and construction markets. Current platform initiatives are focused on durable structures, personal protective systems, clean and disinfect systems, consumerapplications, healthcare, government programs, environmental solutions, and safety services.

DuPont Safety & Protection

Ellen J. KullmanGroup Vice President

Page 37: du pont 2004 Data Book

| 35

Acquisitions and Joint Ventures (2002-2004)(2002-2004)

BioSentry – Stone Mountain, Georgia – Animal and Human health (2004)

Chinook – Ontario, Canada – Methylamines and methylamides business (2004)

Montelli – Guangzhou & Xishui, China – polyester and acrylic solid surface business (2004)

DMR – Tokyo & Toyama, Japan, joint venture equity increase – Corian Solid Surfaces (2004)

Antec International – Sudbury, U.K. – offerings for animal and human health (2003 – acquisition)

SEVP – Pantin, France – protection garments (2003 – acquisition)

White Knight Engineered Products – Charlotte, North Carolina – nonwoven cleanroom apparel (2003 – acquisition)

Stratco – Kansas City, Missouri – oil refining alkylation technology (2003 – acquisition)

Atofina – Villers-St. Paul, France – surface protection and fluoroadditives (2002 – acquisition)

ChemFirst Inc. – Mississippi – aniline and nitrotoluene derivatives (2002 – acquisition)

Kappler Safety Group, Inc. – Guntersville, Alabama – protective apparel (2002 – acquisition)

Divestitures and Shutdowns (2002-2004)(2002-2004)

Camtex® – Workington, U.K. (2002)

Teflon® brand fibers – Richmond, Virginia (2002)

Fire Resistant Furnishings

Vehicular Armoring

Kevlar® cut protection systems

Strata® Laminates

DuPont Acturel™

Alkylation technology

Bio security systems

DuPont™ antiseptic disinfectant

DuPont™ FlexWrap™ and Straight Flash™

DuPont™ StormRoom™ with Kevlar®

DuPont™ Suprel™ medical fabric

Next generation Kevlar® ballistic vest

New colors of Zodiaq® and Corian®

Recent Product Examples

Products/Services Innovation Markets Served

Family of Kevlar® based fire barrier products

Kevlar® composite structures for military vehicles

New core spun Kevlar® based technology

Co-extruded technology for Nomex® laminates

Breathable, impervious barrier

Alkylation refinery processing

Systems approach to cleaning and disinfecting

Disinfectant formulations for foot & mouth, salmonella legionella and lysteria control

Window flashing systems for moisture management

Kevlar® reinforced severe weather protection

Fabric for surgical gowns and drapes with highlevel of protection and comfort

Lighter weight, better protection

Colors embrace many lifestyles and environments

Consumer

Government/Military

Automotive & Industrial

Power Industry & Electrical

Medical & Healthcare

Oil and gas refinery

Poultry and swine raising

Food and beverage; industrial cleaning;agriculture, first response, healthcare

Construction industry

Consumer

Healthcare

Military/civilian

Residential and commercial construction

Key Capabilities Key Products & Services Core MarketsWorld-class safety heritage and Spunlaced, spunbonded, and aramid products for Construction

technology protection applications Protective apparelGlobal value chain relationships Solid surfaces First responder – military, fire/policeGlobal brand strength Safety and operations consulting MedicalAdvantaged technology in key process, Industrial intermediates Process Industries – chemical, oil/gas

product and application areas Clean & disinfection systems Safety and operations servicesSurface & colloidal scienceMicrobiology

Page 38: du pont 2004 Data Book

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

DuPont Safety & Protection

36 | DUPONT 20 04

DuPont Advanced Fiber Systems www.dupont.com/afs

Kevlar® brand fiber Aerospace and aircraft Richmond, VA Isophthaloyl chloride DSMNomex® brand fiber and Automotive Osaka, Japan Metaphenylenediamine Hoechst/Celanese

paper Electrical equipment Tokai, Japan Paraphenylenediamine HoneywellElectronics Asturias, Spain Terephthaloyl chloride RhodiaMilitary/Law enforcement Maydown, TeijinProtective apparel United Kingdom ToyoboTelecommunications

DuPont Chemical Solutions Enterprise

Specialty & Performance Chemicals www.surfaceprotectionsolutions.dupont.com www.antec.co.uk www.dupont.com/teflon/carpetprotectorwww.polymerspecialties.dupont.com www.paperprotect.dupont.com www.chemoswed.comwww.dupont.com/fluoroguard www.dupont.com/glycolicacid www.dupont.com/lubricantswww.dupont.com/oxone www.dupont.com/releasesystems www.dupont.com/tyzorwww.dupont.com/vazo www.dupont.com/zonyl www.idiclo2.com

Anthium® chlorine dioxide Agriculture Deepwater, NJ Acrylic esters Akzo solutions Chemical intermediates North Kingstown, RI Ammonia Asahi Glass

Fine chemicals Polymer intermediates Memphis, TN Caustic Clariant5-Sulfoisophthalic acid Textile Belle, WV 1Formalin Daikin

derivatives Water treatment Villers-St. Paul, France 1Hexafluoropropyleneoxide EastmanFluoroguard® polymer Malmö, Sweden 1Hydrogen cyanide Nippon Hydrazine

additive Sudbury, United Kingdom 1Iodine Solvay/AusimontGlycolic acid 1Isophthalic acid SynetixKrytox® lubricants 1Ketones 3MOxone® monopersulfate 1Methanol 1Teflon® soil, rain and 1Oleum

stain protectors 1TetrafluoroethyleneTraSys® mold release 1Titanium tetrachloride

systems 1Tyzor® organic titanatesVazo® initiatorsVirkon® disinfectantVirkon®S disinfectantZonyl®, Forafac®, and

Foraperle® fluorochemicalintermediates andsurfactants

Industrial Chemicals www.dupont.com/dms www.dupont.com/sodium www.dupont.com/specintermediates www.dupont.com/sulfurproductswww.firstchem.com www.methylamines.dupont.com www.set.dupont.com www.stratco.dupont.com

Acrylonitrile Federal government Wurtland, KY Ammonia Air ProductsAlkylation technology Local governments Burnside, LA Benzene Arch ChemicalsAniline Mining LaPlace, LA Caustic BASFChlorosulfonic acid Oil refining Pascagoula, MS Chlorine BayerDimethyl sulfate Polymer intermediates Deepwater, NJ Hydrogen BPFasloc® anchorage systems Textile Niagara Falls, NY Isophthalic acid CytecHydrogen cyanide Urethane Fort Hill, OH Methane DegussaMethylamines/ intermediates Memphis, TN Methanol FMC

Methylamides Water treatment Baytown, TX Natural gas General ChemicalNitrotoluenes Beaumont, TX Nitric acid MetauxPhenylenediamines James River, VA Oleum RhodiaPhthaloyl chlorides Belle, WV Polyester resinsSecure environmental Martinsburg, WV Sodium chloride

treatment SulfurSodium cyanide TolueneSodium/LithiumSulfuric acid (fuming

and nonfuming)Toluidines

Page 39: du pont 2004 Data Book

DuPont Safety & Protection

Principal Products Major Markets Major Plants Major Raw Materials Significant Competitors

| 37

DuPont Nonwovens www.tyvek.com www.sontara.com

Advanced Composite Carpeting Old Hickory, TN Polyester BBAFabrics (ACT) Clean rooms Richmond, VA Polyethylene Kimberly Clark

Needlepunch and Construction Cerquilho, Brazil Polypropylene PGIspunlace fabrics Contamination control Shenzhen, China Wood pulp

Sontara® spunlaced Pharma/Bio life sciences Utsunomiya, Japanproducts Electronics Luxembourg

Tyvek® brand protective Critical cleaning Asturias, Spainmaterial Aerospace

Typar® high-strength Automotivespunbonded products Food industry

printingEnvelopes/PackagingFootwearGeotextilesGraphicsHome furnishingsMedical and healthcarePersonal protection

DuPont Safety Resources www.dupont.com/safety

Integrated Consultative Healthcare Safety consulting firmsSolutions: Manufacturing

SafeReturns™ Food/AgricultureEmergency Response Oil and Gas/EnergyErgonomics Government/MunicipalitiesContractor Safety TransportationAsset Effectiveness AirCapital Effectiveness Rail

Safety Management TransitSystems: Trucking

Training servicesand seminars

Implementation SupportTraining materials –

STOP™ family Operations Risk Management

DuPont Surfaces www.corian.com www.zodiaq.com

Corian® solid surfaces Consumer goods Buffalo, NY Alumina trihydrate Gibralter/Wilson Art DuPont™ bath surfaces Education Toyama, Japan Methyl methacrylate (ITW)Montelli® solid surfaces Food service Ulsan, Korea Quartz GraniteSimplicity® solid surfaces Home and architectural Thetford Mines, Canada Polystyrene HiMacs/Lucky GoldstarZodiaq® quartz surfaces interiors Guangzhou, China Laminate

Lodging Xishui, China Silestone/CosentinoMedical and healthcare Staron/SamsungRetail fixtures Topstone/Hanwha

Page 40: du pont 2004 Data Book

On October 1, 2001, DuPont Pharmaceuticals was sold to the Bristol-Myers-Squibb Company. DuPont retainedits interests in Cozaar® (losartan potassium) and Hyzaar® (losartan potassium with hydrochlorothiazide).These Angiotensin II Antagonist (AIIA) drugs were discovered by DuPont and developed in collaborationwith Merck & Co. (Merck) and are used in the treatment of hypertension. The U.S. patents covering thecompounds, pharmaceutical formulation, and the use for the treatment of hypertension, includingapproval for pediatric use, will expire in 2010. DuPont has exclusively licensed worldwide marketing andmanufacturing rights for Cozaar® and Hyzaar® to Merck. Pharmaceuticals received royalties and netproceeds as outlined in these licenses and related agreements. Merck is responsible for manufacturing,marketing, and selling Cozaar® and Hyzaar®.

In September 2002, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) approved Cozaar® to reduce the rate ofprogression of nephropathy (kidney disease) in Type 2 diabetic patients with hypertension and nephropathy(hereafter referred to as the RENAAL study). Through 2004, approvals based on the RENAAL study havebeen granted in 52 countries, with further approvals pending.

The Losartan Intervention For Endpoint reduction in hypertension study (LIFE) results were reported andpublished in March 2002 at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology. The study foundthat use of Cozaar® significantly reduced the combined risk of cardiovascular death, heart attack, andstroke in patients with hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) compared to the beta-blockeratenolol. In March 2003, the FDA approved Cozaar® as the first and only hypertensive medicine to helpprevent stroke in patients with hypertension and LVH. In total, 59 countries have granted regulatorylicenses to Cozaar® based on the LIFE study.

In 2004, the FDA granted a new indication for Hyzaar® for initial use in appropriate patients with severehypertension. This fixed dose combination is not indicated for initial therapy of hypertension, exceptwhen the hypertension is severe enough that the value of achieving prompt blood pressure controlexceeds the risk of initiating combination therapy in these patients.

Pharmaceuticals

Overview (dollars in millions)

2004 2003 2002

Pretax operating income $681 $571 $493Pretax operating income – before special items 681 548 468

Provision for income taxes 238 216 164

Segment net assets 159 140 118Affiliate net assets 36 38 37

38 | DUPONT 20 04

Page 41: du pont 2004 Data Book

| 39

Major Global Sites and Principal Products (includes joint ventures and major affiliates)

NORTH AMERICA

CanadaAjax Automotive finishesChatham Agricultural seedKingston Zytel® and Minlon® nylon resinsLethbridge Agricultural seedMaitland Zytel® and Minlon® nylon resins;

Lycra® elastaneOntario LiquiBoxThetford Mines Zodiaq® quartz surfacesToronto LiquiBoxSarnia Ethylene copolymersMexicoAltamira Ti-Pure® titanium dioxideCuliacan Agricultural seedLerma Crop protectionTlalnepantla Automotive finishes; engineering polymers

SOUTH AMERICA

ArgentinaBerazategui Zytel® and Minlon® nylon resins; industrial rubberSalto Agricultural seedBrazilCamacari Industrial rubber and polymerCerquilho Needlepunch and spunlace fabricsEsteio Soy protein isolate food ingredientGoiabal Crop protectionItumbiara Agricultural seedNordeste Zytel® nylon resinSao Paulo Automotive finishesUberaba Ti-Pure® titanium dioxideChilePaine Agricultural seedColombiaBarranguiela Crop protectionVenezuelaValencia Automotive finishes

EUROPE AND MIDDLE EAST

AustriaGuntramsdorf Automotive finishes and industrial coatingsParndorf Agricultural seedCzech RepublicZlin PVB InterlayerBelgiumIeper Soy protein isolate food ingredientMechelen Teflon® nonstick coatings; automotive finishes; engineering

polymers; Vespel® parts and shapesDenmarkAarhus Soy protein isolate food ingredientEgyptCairo Industrial rubberFranceAussonne Agricultural seedBordeau Soy protein isolate food ingredientCernay Crop protectionLe Mans Automotive and industrial finishesMontbrison Powder coatingsParis LiquiBoxVillers-St. Paul Surface protection and fluoroadditivesGermanyBuxtehude Agricultural seedLandshut Powder coatingsMuehlhausen Industrial rubberNeu Isenburg Riston® dry film photoresists; Cyrel®, Digital Cyrel®, Cyrel®FAST

flexographic printing plates and Cyrel® round printing sleevesStade Tyrin® chlorinated polyethyleneUentrop Engineering polymers; Butacite® polyvinyl butyral interlayer;

nylon intermediates, specialties, and polymerVaihingen Permatex® industrial coatings Wuppertal Automotive and industrial finishesHungarySzarvas Agricultural seedItalyBolzano Crop protectionSissa Agricultural seedLuxembourg

Cronar® polyester photographic film base; polyester films; engineering polymers; Tyvek® brand protective material; Typar®

high-strength spunbonded products; Kapton® polyimide filmThe NetherlandsDordrecht Delrin® acetal resins; Teflon® fluoropolymer;

Viton® fluoroelastomer; ethylene copolymers; fluorochemicalsLandgraaf Tynex® nylon filamentsSpainAsturias Nomex® brand fiber; Sontara® spunlaced products; crop protection

SwedenMalmö Fine chemicals

SwitzerlandBulle Powder coatingsMeyrin Research laboratoriesTurkeyAdana Agricultural seed; dimethyl terephthalate (DMT)Izmit Industrial rubberUnited KingdomBristol Microcircuit materialsDarlington Powder coatingsDumfries Polyester filmsEast Kilbride Microplanar® chemical mechanical planarization formulations;

PlasmaSolv® and Posistrip® removersHumberside Dymel® aerosol propellantsManchester LiquiBoxPeterborough Soy protein-based consumer food productsRuabon Syton® and Mazin® colloidal silica slurriesWilton Purified terephthalic acid (PTA) and resins; polyester films

AFRICA

South AfricaRosslyn Agricultural seedZimbabweJuru Agricultural seed

ASIA PACIFIC

AustraliaGirraween Crop protectionNarromine Agricultural seedChinaChangchun Automotive finishesChangshu Hydrofluorocarbon blend refrigerantsChendo Powder coatingsDongguan Microcircuit materials, powder coatingsFoshan Polyester filmsGuangzhou Montelli® solid surfacesHuangshan Powder coatingsLoehe Soy protein isolate food ingredientNingbo Polyester filmsQingdao Industrial rubberShanghai Crop protection; research laboratoriesShenzhen Riston® dry film photoresists; engineering polymers;

Sontara® spunlaced products; Tyvek® brand protective material; Teflon® nonstick coatings, Zytel® nylon resin

Wuhan Soy protein isolate food ingredients and oilsWuxi Nylon filamentsXishui Montelli® solid surfacesYun Meng Soy protein isolate food ingredientZhangjigang Delrin® polyacetalZhengzhou Soy protein isolate food ingredientIndiaHyderabad Agricultural seedMadurai Tynex® nylon filamentsSavli Engineering polymers; crop protection; LiquiBoxIndonesiaCiteureup Industrial rubberJakarta Polyester filmsMalang Agricultural seedSurabaya Crop protectionJapanChiba Suva® refrigerants; ethylene copolymersGifu Polyester filmsIbaraki Polyester filmsMizushima Kapton® polyimide filmOsaka Nomex® brand paperOtake Ethylene copolymersSagamihara Polyester filmsShimizu Teflon® fluoropolymer; fluorochemicalsTokai Kapton® polyimide film; Kevlar® brand fiberTokyo Soy protein isolate food ingredientToyama Corian® solid surfacesToyohashi Riston® dry film photoresistsUtsunomiya Engineering polymers; Tyvek® brand protective material; polyester filmsPhilippinesCabuyao Crop protectionRepublic of KoreaGumi Adhesiveless flexible copper clad laminatesIchon Riston® dry film photoresistsUlsan Butacite® polyvinyl butyral interlayer; engineering polymers;

Corian® solid surfacesSingapore Zytel® and Minlon® nylon resins; specialties, and polymer;

Delrin® acetal resins; TaiwanHsinchu Rexon® flexible laminatesKuan Yin Ti-Pure® titanium dioxide; nylon yarns; purified terephthalic acid (PTA)Lung Tan Crop protectionTaoyuan ATS customer research, microcircuit materialsThailandBangpoo Crop protectionLampoon Agricultural seed

Page 42: du pont 2004 Data Book

40 | DUPONT 20 04

AlabamaMobile Crop protection

CaliforniaHayward Microplanar® chemical mechanical planarization formulations;

PlasmaSolv® and Posistrip® removersSacramento LiquiBoxSanta Barbara Polymer-OLED (organic light-emitting diode) display devicesTorrance LCD enhancementWoodland Agricultural seed

ConnecticutBridgeport Security and authentication solutions

DelawareEdge Moor Ti-Pure® titanium dioxide; ferric chlorideNewark – Pencader Vespel® parts and shapesNewark –

Stine-Haskell Lab ResearchNewark – Tralee Park Kalrez® perfluoroelastomer partsWilmington Corporate headquarters, customer service centerWilmington –

Experimental Station Research and development

FloridaLake Wales LiquiBoxStarke Zircon; Starblast® abrasives

GeorgiaValdosta Crop protection

HawaiiWaialu Agricultural seed

IdahoNampa Agricultural seed

IllinoisEl Paso Crop protectionGibson City SolaeGood Hope Agricultural seedLe Roy Agricultural seedLitchfield Agricultural seedMcLeansboro Agricultural seedPrinceton Agricultural seedSt. Joseph Agricultural seedWoodhull Agricultural seed

IndianaPlymouth Agricultural seedRemington SolaeRushville Agricultural seedTipton Agricultural seedWorthington Agricultural seed

IowaAlgona Agricultural seedCherokee Agricultural seedDurant Agricultural seedFort Madison Automotive finishes; ink jet inksHedrick Agricultural seedMarengo Agricultural seedMt. Pleasant Agricultural seedReinbeck Agricultural seedRenwick Agricultural seedToledo Agricultural seed

KentuckyLouisville Neoprene synthetic rubber; fluorochemicals;

soy protein-based industrial polymer productsWurtland Sulfur products and specialty acids

LouisianaBurnside Sulfur products and specialty acidsLa Place Neoprene synthetic rubber; phenylenediaminesPlaquemine Tyrin® chlorinated polyethylene; HDPE; Nordel® hydrocarbon rubber

engage polyolefin elastomer

MichiganConstantine Agricultural seedMount Clemens Automotive finishes

MinnesotaJackson Agricultural seedMinneapolis Soy protein-based consumer food products

MississippiDe Lisle Ti-Pure® titanium dioxidePascagoula Aniline and nitrololuene derivatives

NebraskaDoniphan Agricultural seedYork Agricultural seed

New JerseyDeepwater Specialty and performance chemicals; fluorochemicals;

elastomers; industrial chemicalsParlin Cyrel®, Digital Cyrel®, and Cyrel®FAST flexographic printing plates

and Cyrel® round printing sleeves; Teflon® and Autograph®

nonstick coatings; Pyralin® polyimide coatings

New YorkBuffalo Corian® solid surfaces; Tedlar® PVF filmNiagara Falls Sodium and lithiumRochester Ink jet inks

North CarolinaFayetteville Butacite® polyvinyl butyral interlayer; Nafion® ion

exchange membranes; polyester filmLaurel Hill Industrial rubberLaurinburg Agricultural seedResearch Triangle Park Electronic materials R&D and customer service centerWhiteville Industrial rubber

North DakotaWahpeton Agricultural seed

OhioAshland LiquiBoxBellevue SolaeCircleville Vespel® parts and shapes; Kapton® polyimide film;

polyester films; Teflon® fluoropolymerCleveland Vespel® parts and shapesDayton Polymers for IC photoresistsFort Hill Sulfur products and specialty acidsGrand Rapids Agricultural seedUpper Sandusky LiquiBox

OklahomaPryor Solae

PennsylvaniaTowanda Riston® dry film photoresists and Pyralux® flexible laminates;

Cromalin®, Dylux®, Thermal 4-Color proofing; Cyrel® coversheets, Inkjet barrier films, Green TapeTM low temperature co-fired ceramic; photopolymer holographic film

Rhode IslandNorth Kingstown Specialty chlorine dioxide

South CarolinaCharleston Crastin® PBT polyester resins; Hytrel® polyester elastomer Florence Polyester films; Cronar® polyester photographic film base

TennesseeChattanooga Zytel® and Minlon® nylon resins; ZeniteTM LCP (liquid crystal polymer)

resins; industrial rubberMemphis Hydrogen cyanide and derivatives; soy protein isolate

food ingredient; Oxone® monopersulfateNew Johnsonville Ti-Pure® titanium dioxideOld Hickory Sontara® spunlaced products; Crystar® specialty resin;

Biomax® hydro/biodegradable polyester resin; polyester films

TexasBayport Kapton® polyimide filmBaytown AnilineBeaumont Acrylonitrile and aniline; Hypalon® chlorosulfonated polyethyleneCorpus Christi Suva® refrigerants; Formacel® blowing agents;

Dymel® aerosol propellantsFreeport Engage® polyolefin elastomerHouston Powder coatings; crop protectionLaPorte Elvanol® polyvinyl alcohol resins;

crop protection; fluorochemicalsOrange Specialties and polymer; ethylene copolymersPlainview Agricultural seedVictoria Ethylene copolymersWeslaco Agricultural seed

UtahLogan Holographic optical elements and security

authentication holograms

VirginiaFront Royal Automotive finishesHopewell Polyester filmsJames River Sulfur products and specialty acidsRichmond Polyester films; Tyvek® brand protective material;

Kevlar® brand fiber; Nomex® brand fiber and paper; Zytel® and Minlon® nylon resins

West VirginiaBelle Dymel® aerosol propellants; methylamines/methylamides;

dimethyl sulfate; glycolic acid; Vazo® initiatorsMartinsburg Fasloc® anchorage systemsParkersburg Teflon® and Tefzel® fluoropolymers; Butacite® polyvinyl butyral

interlayer; Zytel® and Minlon® nylon resins; Delrin® acetal resins; Rynite® PET and Crastin® PBT polyester resins; Hytrel® polyester elastomer; ZeniteTM LCP (liquid crystal polymer) resins; Tynex® filaments

Puerto RicoManati Crop protection; microcircuit materials

Major U.S. Sites and Principal Products (includes joint ventures and major affiliates)

Page 43: du pont 2004 Data Book
Page 44: du pont 2004 Data Book

DuPont Investor Relations 1007 Market Street Wilmington, DE 19898(302) 774 4994 Fax: (302) 773 2631 www.dupont.com

Copyright© 2005 DuPont. All Rights Reserved.The DuPont Oval Logo, DuPont™, The miraclesof science™ and all products denoted with ™and ® are trademarks or registered trademarksof DuPont or its affiliates.

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