The U.S. boom in natural-gas production is luring investment from foreign manufacturers eager to tap a cheap, abundant supply of fuel and
feedstocks.
Companies from the U.S. and abroad have invested or are planning to
invest billions of dollars through the rest of the decade in plants that
would churn out chemicals, fertilizers, plastics, metals and fuel from
gas. Many foreign companies, alone or in joint ventures with U.S.
partners, are taking advantage of gas that costs a fraction of what it
does in Europe or Asia to expand production in the U.S.
Boston Consulting Group estimates that international companies will
invest at least $50 billion through the end of the decade on projects
that take advantage of low-price natural gas.
And more:
Linde AG, a German gas-and-engineering company, recently said it would spend
$200 million to build a new air-separation unit in La Porte, Texas, that
would provide synthetic gas for the petrochemical industry. The
investment "is directly tied to the price and availability of natural
gas," said spokesman Uwe Wolfinger. "Five or seven years ago, this type
of investment would have been far more likely elsewhere in the world."
The
U.S. gas bonanza, fueled by the widespread adoption of new drilling
techniques such as hydraulic fracturing, has already given a boost to
domestic manufacturers. When natural-gas prices were high a decade
ago—about twice as high as they are today—Dow Chemical Co.
invested in new petrochemical facilities in the Middle East, where
energy was less expensive. Today, Dow and other energy-intensive firms
are investing heavily in the U.S.
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