www.supplyht.com/articles/91252-industrial-hotspots-u-s-nuclear-power-industry-evaluates-59-capacity-expansion
U.S. Nuclear Power Industry Evaluates 59% Capacity Expansion
Industrial Info Resources (www.industrialinfo.com) said
there are 48 nuclear power plants being evaluated for development by both
utilities and private investment groups. If all were to come on line - a
dubious likelihood - it would result in a 59% increase in nuclear generating
capacity from 102,400 megawatts to 163,500 MW. Currently there are 104 units
operating in the U.S., according to industrialinfo.com, but no new ones since 1996.
Nuclear power plants currently provide about 20% of this country’s electricity.
DOE projects a 45% growth in electricity demand by 2030, and 35 to 50 new
nuclear plants would need to be activated by then in order to maintain
nuclear’s share of the energy market. Efforts are underway between the U.S.
government and the nuclear industry to reduce licensing time to about five
years compared to the 10-20 years previously experienced.
Industrialinfo’s projection of 48 units being contemplated is higher than the
figure of 30 new units cited by the Nuclear Energy Institute at its annual
conference last May.
Here are some other industrial “hotspots” cited by industrialinfo.com.
Industrial
Manufacturing. As of the end of June, the Industrial Manufacturing
industry saw over 1,000 projects begin construction worth in excess of $35
billion in North America. As of that date, Industrial Info Resources was
tracking 800 capital and maintenance projects worth an estimated $28 billion
that are scheduled to begin construction during the second half of 2007 within
the Industrial Manufacturing industry. Currently the Mid-Atlantic region in the United States has a
slight edge over the Great Lakes region as the location of the most spending
during the second half of 2007. The Mid-Atlantic Region is currently expected
to be home to $5.1 billion worth of project activity while the Great Lakes
Region is a close second at $4.8 billion. Despite recent woes, the automotive
sector is still planning to spend significant amounts of money on expansions,
retools and grassroots facilities in the region, the hub of the industry. Some
of the key projects expected to begin construction later this year include a
proposed $730 million grassroots engine plant in Michigan; a proposed $700
million grassroots axle plant, also in Michigan; a proposed $560 million
grassroots transmission plant in Indiana; and a proposed $500 million engine plant
expansion in Wisconsin.
Pipelines.
Over $6.8 billion in proposed pipeline projects are scheduled to begin
construction in 2008 in the southwest U.S. The pipeline projects include crude
oil, refined petroleum products and natural gas transmission. Texas represents
40% of the planned projects in dollar value at $2.7 billion spread across 24
projects. Louisiana has 11 projects pending representing $1.7 billion and
Oklahoma has 10 proposed projects worth an estimated $1.5 billion. The majority
of the scheduled construction start-ups for these projects are expected between
February and June 2008.
Copper mining.
The North American copper mining sector, after years of downsizing in the 1990s
and early 2000s, has undergone a major consolidation and rearrangement of
production capacity. Since 2002, favorable copper demand and commodity prices
have driven capacity increases and modernizations at existing copper mines and
downstream processing facilities. Grassroots operations are also under
development and projects that were unfeasible for years have become feasible.
Great Lakes Region.
The Great Lakes Region recorded a total of 527 construction and maintenance
projects between January and June 2007, worth in excess of $15.1 billion. An
additional 572 projects worth $27 billion will break ground between July and
December.
Leading the spending charge is the Alternative Fuels industry
with $8.8 billion worth of ethanol and biodiesel project activity coming up.
Mid-Atlantic Region.
The Mid-Atlantic Region is the only region in the country showing a decline
in spending when compared to 2006. The percentage drop is 12.6% from $24.76
billion in 2006 to $21.64 billion in 2007. $21.64 billion is still a high level
of activity, however.
Northeast Region.
A recent analysis of Industrial Info’s active plant database revealed that in
the first six months of 2007, $11.5 billion worth of Capital/MRO (maintenance)
investments began construction. This is an enormous jump in project activity
over the same time frame in 2006, when there were 60 projects with a cumulative
investment of just more than $1 billion that got underway.
New England Region.
The New England Region is currently anticipating 34 new industrial plants
to begin operations throughout 2007, a gain of 53% over 2006, when 18 plants
opened. The combined total investment value (TIV) of projects sourced from this
year’s plants, both for original construction costs and planned future
projects, is $616 million.
Nueces County, TX.
A large concentration of refineries and chemical plants currently are
evaluating more than $2.1 billion worth of industrial project spending from 41
major projects in this county, centered around Corpus Christi.
Petroleum refining commands almost 50% of the planned project
activity.
Louisiana.
Industrial firms are developing 259 capital and maintenance construction
projects representing $10 billion in total investment value in Louisiana,
scheduled to begin construction in 2007. This is a 30% increase from the value
of project kick-offs in 2006. Projects include oil and gas terminals, petroleum
refining, chemical processing, alternative fuels and power plants.