The Business Facilities Blog

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Michigan is Hiring


The Michigan Economic Development Corporation approved state-funded incentives of over $53 million to help seven companies expand or build new projects. Together, the projects are expected to create 3,512 jobs

The projects include a $10 million engineering center in Pittsfield Township, MI,, for which Grupo Aernnova, a Spanish aerospace company, will receive $18.5 million over fifteen years through tax credits. The move could bring 600 new jobs to Washtenaw County. Aernnova considered 15 states before choosing MichiganÑa key factor being the availability of engineers in the Ann Arbor region.

Credit Acceptance Corporation will add a $3.8 million expansion to its headquarters in Southfield, creating 506 jobs. Also in Southfield, MARS Advertising Prize Logic LLC will spend $1.7 million for a headquarters and create 150 jobs. Sysco Food Services will add a 90,000-square-foot, $18 million expansion in Canton, MI, hiring 130 workers. Azure Dynamics Corp. will relocate its Canadian headquarters to Oak Park, MI, spending $2.5 million and creating 125 jobs. Grandvic Investment, a plastics company, will create a $2.7 million expansion in Standish, MI, adding 75 jobs. The Thunder Bay Development LLC will purchase a $15 million manufacturing plant and create 150 new jobs in Alpena, MI.

Sources: Globe St., The Detroit News, The Detroit Free Press

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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

China's Product, Georgia's Pride

With China's economy on the upswing, Georgia economic developers have been courting investment from the foreign power. Yesterday, the third Chinese company in 15 months has announced that it will be moving to the state. (Remember when it was American companies scrambling for Chinese manufacturing?)

Sany Heavy Industry Company, a China-based maker of construction equipment, will construct a $30 million plant on a 241-acre site in Peachtree City, Georgia. The plant, expected to be in operation by 2009, will create 200 jobs initially, and potentially up to 600 jobs in 10 years.

Sany will be receiving declining property abatements which will save the company around $2.2 million; Peachtree City and Fayette County split $200,000 donation to buy the $6.5 million site.

Says Governor Sonny Perdue:
It hasn't happened by accident. We've been in Asia and China looking for relationships and partnerships.
And so it is.

Sources: Atlanta Journal Constitution, MSN Money, Sany

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Thursday, July 26, 2007

Courting Peabody

It seems as if everybody wants Peabody Energy's $3 billion coal gasification plant--and Peabody wants incentives, among other basic logistical considerations. The St. Louis-based company is considering locations in Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky to build a joint coal-to-natural-gas plant with ConocoPhillips. Apparently, executives at the company promised to recommend Kentucky sites if lawmakers approve tax breaks over $300 million. The governor of Kentucky wants to hold a special legislative session on Monday to approve the incentive package.

Peabody as said that they are looking for a location in the Midwest with large reserves and an existing infrastructure, that would be designed to produce between 50 billion to 70 billion cubic-feet of pipeline quality natural gas from 3.5 million tons of Midwest coal. Peabody is the world's largest private-sector coal company, fueling 10% of all U.S. electricity generation and more than 2% worldwide.


Sources: Forbes, CNN, Peabody

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Wednesday, July 11, 2007

An Artifical Island Powers Up

Siemens and Samsung will be investing around $650 million into a 785 megawatt power plant in Singapore, scheduled for completion in 2010.

Singapore's Island Power Company, which is owned by Massachusetts-based Intergen, has awarded a contract to to Germany-based Siemens Power Generation to build a power plant on Jurong Island, a man-made island in Singapore. South Korea-based Samsung will supply the main auxiliary systems and perform civil and assembly work.

Jurong Island, which was created in by developers, oil companies, and marketers in the 90's, is home to over 88 petroleum and chemical companies.

Sources: JTC Corporation, Industrial Info Resources, Forbes,

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Friday, July 6, 2007

Green is the new Gold

The UK's version of a Wal-Mart grocery, Tesco, is often accused of forcing suppliers to cut costs and running small shops out of business. To improve its image, conform to government regulations, and hopefully boost its bottom line, the retail giant will be greening its operations and emissions and lessening its environmental impact. Tesco has pledged to triple recycling, cut in store energy use by 50% from the 2000 level by next year, and half greenhouse gas emissions by 2020. At the same time, Tesco has been opening an average of one store per week.

By investing in 500 million Euros (about $680 million U.S.) worth of environmentally friendly facility refits and research, 100 million Euros ($135 million) into developing low carbon technology, and 5 million Euros ($6.8 million) to fund Tesco's new Institute for Sustainable Consumption (with Oxford University), Tesco will be setting an example for all global retail giants. Tesco's plan may not be perfect, but it is a start.

From Ethical Corporation Magazine:
How Tesco has cut its energy usage

- More energy-efficient ovens, refrigeration and air-conditioning Ð the big users of energy in stores.
- More efficient lighting, and timers and motion detectors that switch off the lights when they are not needed.
- Redesigned fridges to keep more of the cold air in Ð cutting energy use by 10%.
- Equipment that retrieves cold air from chiller cabinets to use as an energy-efficient alternative to air-conditioning on the sales floor.
- Heat recovered from machinery to use as heating when needed.
Sir Terry Leahy, CEO of Tesco, wrote in the London Telegraph in April:
We want to lead what we have called a revolution in green consumption, and you can only do that from the front. Our commitment to combat climate change is an investment in the future of our business as well as of the planet.
Sources: Ethical Corporation, Oxford, The Telegraph

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Thursday, July 5, 2007

Industrial Distribution Evolution

As the first half of 2007 comes to a close, Industrial Info Resources (IIR), a marketing information service, has been tracking over 800 industrial manufacturing projects beginning construction, worth an estimated $28 billion. According to Bloomberg News, manufacturing and spending grew in June at the fastest pace in 14 months.

The IIR ranked areas throughout the U.S.
- The Mid-Atlantic Region has the most spending in the second half of 2007 at $5.1 billion. This is mainly due to the proposed $4 billion Dulles Metrorail corridor project, which plans to add 23 miles of rail line in Virginia.
- The Great Lakes region will see $4.8 billion in industrial investments, particularly in the automobile industry, including two engine plants each costing upwards of $700 million.
- The Southeast has $4.1 billion in spending; The Midwest has $2.9 billion; and the Rocky Mountains region has $2.6 billion in investments.

IIF's conclusion?
Rail and automotive spending combine for the majority of the spending this year, as they have for the last several years. Despite its problems, the automotive sector continues to crank out project work, however, now it is focused on various areas of the continent. . . When it is all said and done, the Industrial Manufacturing Industry will have had an extremely good year in terms of overall capital and maintenance spending. This second half activity should give the industry the momentum it needs to continue the spending push into 2008.

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Friday, June 29, 2007

Wait Till We Get Our Globalization On You

Hanesbrands Inc., the maker of Hanes ("Wait Till We Get Our Hanes On You"), Champion, and Wonderbra (among other inner and outerwear) is closing nine facilities and firing around 5,300 U.S., Canadian, Puerto Rican, Dominican, and Mexican employees, in order to continue its globalization "cost reduction strategy."

The move, announced Wednesday, will concentrate bra sewing and manufacturing to lower-cost countries in Central America and Asia. The company is continuing the process it began last year, when it separated from Sara Lee Corporation. One of the facilities is a manufacturing plant in Statesville, NC, which will lose 70 jobs. Just last month, Hanesbrands closed another plant in Statesville, firing around 140 people. In Winston-Salem, at the company's corporate headquarters, 260 management and administrative jobs will be eliminated.

In the past year, the company has announced plans to eliminate 10,300 jobs and close 15 factories.

Sources: Hanesbrands, The Toronto Star, Winston-Salem Journal

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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Having cake, and eating it too


This post is dedicated to Michelle, and her attempt to keep Business Facilities' facility full of cake and cookies.

-Celebration Foods, the company that produces Carvel ice cream cakes and other desserts, will be relocating its sweet headquarters and manufacturing operation to New Britain, Connecticut. The $16.3 million facility is expected to generate 225 jobs, bringing Celebration's plants in Maryland, California, and Massachusetts under one roof. Centerplan Development Co. broke ground this month on the 13 acre site, which they will rent to Celebration.

The city and state Department of Economic and Community Development offered the company a $1 million grant and a five year, 80% discount on real and personal property taxes.

-While on the topic, the town of Brookhaven, New York is sounding very delicious. Tate's Wholesale, a national distributor of gourmet baked goods, relocated its manufacturing facilities to a 27,000-square-foot facility this month. The move represents a major move Brookhaven, which created the first "floating Empire Zone" for the company, allowing Tate's to be eligible for wage tax credits and other benefits. The company plans to create 50 jobs.

Sources: The Hartford Courant, Newsday

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Monday, June 25, 2007

IBM Smells the Roses

Following its announcement last month that it will dedicate $1 billion per year to reducing energy consumption (Project Big Green), IBM 's newest expansion will officially be a green one. The computer company is dropping a cool $86 million into a green data center in Boulder, CO.

The expansion will add 80,000 square feet of space by next April. The new facility will reduce energy costs for IBM and its clients by using recycled materials for manufacturing and increasing virtualization use and overall computing density.

IBM has also been awarded incentive funding by both the state of Colorado ($632,000) and the city of Boulder (a $100,000 rebate program).

IBM has over eight million square feet of data center space worldwide. Project Big Green aims to double IBM's data center capacity by 2010 without increasing energy use. Sun and HP are also vowing to green their data center operations. In the expansion announcement, TechSpot.com wrote:
Power concerns are huge, and more companies are seeing it better, for both public relations and ultimately for business, to work "green."
Sources: TechSpot, IBM, Commercial Property News, ComputerWorldUK

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Monday, June 11, 2007

Arabian Pathfinders

Arabian Automobiles Company, one of the largest automobile distributors in the Gulf and the sole distributor of Nissan, Infiniti, and Renault in the Northern Emirates, announced today that they will invest over $136 million over the next three years to expand its sales and services facilities in and around Dubai. The company, which is owned by AW Rostamani Corporation, will construct its largest logistics facility on three million square feet in Dubai Industrial City, with the capacity to hold 12,000 cars. The facility will cost $95.3 million.

The firm's goal is to capture at least 25% of Dubai's local car market by 2010.

In 2006, 236,515 cars were sold in the United Arab Emirates, an increase of 23 percent over 2005. According to Arabian Automobiles statistics, the sales of Japanese cars between January and April of 2007 grew 32.3 percent compared to the same period last year.

Despite political tensions in the Middle East and the rising cost of living in Dubai, the auto market is hot. At least Arabian Auto is banking on it.

Sources: Middle East North Africa Financial Network (Jordon), AW Rostamani/Arabian Automobiles, AME Info, Gulf News

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Friday, June 1, 2007

A Dubai on the Atlantic?



Have you heard of "the new Dubai"? It seems like a contradiction in terms, considering that Dubai City itself is quite new (before 1971, there were no signs of that city on the Arabian Peninsula).

However, the "New Dubai" that I'm referring to is what the Senegalese government is calling its new capital, which will be located 150 kilometers North of Dakar, the present capital.

The city does not exist yet. On this remote stretch of coast, called Lompoul, Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade envisions a $30 billion "Dubai on the Atlantic," also called W.D.C. by its planners. Dubai World, the original Dubai's state holding company, will begin construction in Senegal next year.

The story was reported today, however a group of Gulf developers met with the Senegalese President this April in Dubai (the "old" Dubai) to discuss the "new administrative city" that was to be developed. Among the UAE business people in discussions were members of Dubai World as well as Tameer, a.k.a. Al Khaleej Development Company, which is also developing a $20 billion city in Libya.

President Wade's election in 2000 ended four decades of socialist rule, and since then has made Senegal attractive to foreign investors. However, he has faced criticism for not doing enough to end poverty and unemployment. Thousands of Senegalese people continue to risk their lives every year trying to reach Europe, and currently over 40% of the population is unemployed.

Reuters reported an interview with Ahmed Khalifa Niasse, the minister leading the project:
"In three years, the central government will no longer be in Dakar, but in the new capital. In the first two years, we expect 200,000 people to come, and three years later, 2 million. . .We think this new Dubai can be more attractive than the Dubai in the Gulf."
Senegal, a French-speaking country in West Africa, will model its new city on Maghreb styles, designed by a Parisian Architect. Plans for the city include Africa's first high-speed train linking Lompoul with Dakar, an eight lane toll road, and a Formula 1 circuit. Currently there are no direct flights from Senegal to anywhere in the Dubai area, which will change by 2008.

Sources: Reuters (Alertnet), Reuters (Africa), Overseas Property Mall

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Massachusetts' Thick Skin


Organogenesis Inc. announced plans to build a new headquarters and factory in Massachusetts, adding over 300 high-skilled jobs. The company, which makes artificial skin called Apligraph, plans to build a new 250,000-square-foot complex within 15 miles of its current Canton, MA headquarters.

Organogenesis had been planing to expand its operations outside of Massachusetts, but was lured by the state's incentives and Life Sciences Initiative. Massachusetts will provide $12.9 million in grants and infrastructure support, as well as $5 million in low interest loans, to the company. The Boston Globe reported today that "with biotech companies and other life-science businesses riding a wave of job growth and financial success, Massachusetts is competing with other states to lure and keep companies." Governor Deval Patrick announced that the company's decision to remain in MA was the first victory since the announcement of Massachusetts's $1 billion life-sciences strategy last month.

The artificial skin that Organogenesis produces is made from live human cells (apparently from infant foreskin) and cow collagen. Doctors place the grafts on diabetic ulcers and other wounds.

Sources: The Boston Globe, Organogenesis, Metropolis

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Thursday, May 31, 2007

The Biggest Piece of Coal in China


The Xinjiang Province, a huge, sparsely populated region in Northwest China, began hosting China's largest coal chemical project this month. Xinwen Mining Group, based in the Sandong Province, has invested $327 million (2.6 billion yuan) in the facility, which will have estimated annual sales of $183 million, or 10 million tons a coal.

This large plant is a needed response to small, dangerous, and sometimes illegal mines are scattered throughout the region, 80 of which were closed this year. China, the world's largest coal producer and consumer, saw 4,746 deaths in coal mine accidents last year--an average of 13 deaths per day. The hope is that larger projects will have tighter regulations on mines.

Xinjiang, sometimes referred to as East or Chinese Turkestan, is home to majority of Muslim Turkic groups. Historically, Xinjiang, like its neighbor Tibet, has fought to separate itself from China. Since the fifties, however, a Chinese propoganda movement known as "Go West" has encouraged Chinese people from the East to settle in the region and transform the frontier. Human rights advocates have historically scorned China for is work prisons (Laogai) and involvement of the World Bank in Xinjiang.

In addition to the new mine, he Xinwen Mining Group plans to invest more than $3.8 billion for coal chemical development in the Yili Rive Valley of Xinjiang.

Sources: China Daily, Industrial Info Resources, Times of India, Tibet Environmental Watch, Interfax China

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Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Hula Hoops

Harry Eager, a staff writer for the Maui News, asked an interesting question last week: "Is development of commercial space to dicey, pricey?" In the limited, in-demand space on Maui, the question fits (with not much space leftover).

In his review of a survey done by Colliers Monroe Friedlander, a commercial real estate broker, manager, and consultant, he states that labor shortages and delays in permits and government supervision process is heightening the risk of developing. A senior manager at the agency estimates that construction costs for a low-rise commercial building, the most popular on the island, are about $300 per square foot, not counting land.

MSN reported that increasing housing and energy costs in the Hawaiian islands are expected to drive local prices up 4.5% in 2007. Construction authorizations dropped in the first quarter of this year, however construction jobs increased due to development of existing permits.

Marty Kenny, the Collier's Maui broker, compared the commercial market in Maui to that of Manhattan, suggesting that mixed-use developments were the most viable option for the island. The mixed-use model (with retail on street level, and offices and/or residential space on the upper floors) would serve the 140,000 residents, and upwards of 40,000 tourists who visit Maui each day during the busy season.

Maui is the second largest island in Hawaii, at 727 square miles. Its main industries are tourism, agriculture (sugarcane and pineapple), and the high tech industry. The development of Maui's land, which is known for natural beauty and, is controversial. Between 1970 and 2005, the population of Maui has more than tripled, causing a strain on the island's infrastructure.

Sources: The Maui News, MSN Money

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Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Microsoft Loves Fargo

Microsoft will be adding a 120,000-square-foot facility to its sprawling Fargo, ND campus. The computer company's long-range plan is to have 3,800 people working there. That's a huge presence for such a small state (North Dakota has around 635,000 residents).

Microsoft acquired the facility six years ago for $1.1 billion. One of the reasons that the company is able to expand is the low cost of living. Apparently, a $50,000-a-year job in Fargo is equivalent to a $62,000-a-year job in Seattle. There are currently 1,245 Microsoft employees in North Dakota (that's roughly 1 out of every 500 people in the state).

If you're interested in keeping up with Microsoft's latest facility expansions, also check out last month's blog: "Microsoft, Everyone's Favorite Economic Developer".

Sources: Puget Sound Business Journal, Minnesota Public Radio, International Herald Tribune

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Thursday, May 10, 2007

Debt for Oil?

In April, it was established that the Russian oil company Lukoil will become the largest oil supplier in Iraq. They will be replacing the disgraced Halliburton and will become the dominant conveyor of "black gold" in the country. In fact, the Russian government is giving full support to Lukoil's ambition to become the first large international energy group to develop a major Iraqi oil field since the 2003 U.S. invasion.

What does this mean? As Iraq works to rebuild itself, it is still struggling with a massive amount of debt. Russia has forgiven Iraq for much of the debt, but not entirely. Since the world's top oil companies are scrambling to win a stake in Iraqi oilfields (which hold the third largest reserves in the world), Lukoil would like to exchange debt for oil. Iraq has so far refused. However, the passage of an oil law is expected within the next couple of weeks. If Iraq allows the countries that it is indebted to trade debt for resources, this would be good for businesses in Russia and other countries, and presumably it would be good for Iraq.

But would it? Refer to my earlier blogs on foreign investments in Africa, and WTO and IMF criticisms. What a fine line we walk as developers; jobs are good, facilities are good, money is good, however the risk is that the country could be dominated, or "sucked dry," by foreign interest.

A member of Iraq's Parliamentary Commission of Economy, Investment and Reconstruction told the press that Iraq needs around $300 billion to rebuild all its oil, economy, industry, agriculture, infrastructure. It is important to note that currently over seven foreign firms from Iran, China, Egypt, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and, of course, Russia (among others) are attending the Rebuild Iraq International Trade Fair, which is being held in Jordan right now. What are the alternatives to foreign investment in Iraq? Perhaps there are none.

Sources: Moscow News, MSNBC, Business Day (South Africa), The Middle East/North Africa Financial Network

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Wednesday, May 9, 2007

DIY Expansion

The DIY Group Inc., a large packaging company, has begun construction of a $2.25 million, 126,000-square-foot expansion project at its facility in Muncie, Indiana.

The expansion of DIY's existing 432,000-square-foot facility will make DIY one of the largest contract packaging operations in the Midwest. The company, which packs products into blister, clamshell packs, and shrink wrap, plans to add 25 employees to its current 246-person workforce. The DIY Group was granted a 10-year Real Property Tax Abatement by the Delaware County Council.

Source: The Star Press, The Muncie-Delaware Chamber of Commerce


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Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Dangerous Business Part 3: Economic Development or Exploitation?


"The discovery of oil in Africa has been, almost without exception, a disaster for the host countries," writes Andrew Leonard in his Salon.com review of John Ghazvinian's novel, "Untapped: The Scramble for Africa's Oil," "The reasons are partly economic, partly having to do with the lack of well-developed institutions in many African states, partly owing to colonial legacies, and partly the fault of Western oil companies all too willing to turn a blind eye to corruption while the getting is good. In virtually no case has oil money been successfully employed for economic development, and so far, the likely prospect is that nearly every African country with significant oil deposits will end up worse off after the oil is gone than they were before the pumping started."

The assumption is that when a wealthy country finds resources on a poor country (such as Ethiopia) the lives of the people in that country will be drastically improved. The company will mine the resources, and in return, help the country with infrastructure, schools, etc. The opposite is in fact may be true. Between 1970 and 1993, writes Ghazvinian, countries without oil saw their economies grow four times faster then those countries with oil.

You have most likely heard the stories of corrupt governments, fat pockets, poverty, and environmental destruction that seem to be the result of in Western expansions in many African countries. High risk investments in politically and economically unstable counties will most likely lead to violence, as on on April 24, when over 70 employees in a Chinese-run oilfield in Ethiopia were killed, and more were kidnapped.

According to the Voice of America the government has been urging state-owned companies to operate internationally to help support China's expanding economy. Today's article in the Sudan Tribune reported on the annual meeting of the African Development Bank, which will take place in Shanghai on May 16. The location alone shows the powerful role that China has in African redevelopment. Over 800 Chinese companies, and around 100,000 Chinese citizens, live in Africa.

Since the U.S. began operations of AFRICOM in February, Pentagon and many military analysts argue the continentÕs growing strategic importance necessitates a dedicated regional command.

On May 3, the Council on Foreign Relations reported:
Some experts suggest the commandÕs creation was motivated by more specific concerns: China and oil. With Soviet influence gone and FranceÕs traditional presence much diminished, China has poured money into the continent in recent years as it jockeys for access to natural resources. And the United States is projected to import at least 25 percent of its oil from Africa by 2015, according to the National Intelligence Council.
I was reminded to pay closer attention to this story when I read another article in The Sudan Tribune. A Darfur-based rebel group (the Sudan Liberation Movement) warned foreign oil companies that they should stop doing business in the area. They said that the mineral resources are the property of the people of Darfur, and should remain unexploited until the conflict (civil war) is over.
Only people of Darfur are enabled to decide on the fate of this wealth, they said.

Sources: The Wall Street Journal (subscription), Voice of America, The Sudan Tribune, Salon.com
Image: The African Oil Politics Blog

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Monday, May 7, 2007

Fueling Lockheed's Fire


On Saturday, the Decatur Daily of Alabama reported that a railroad spur connecting a main line to the Lockheed Martin Corporation's Courtland, AL facility would help allow the company to make future expansions.

The rail spur would extend over 6,000 feet of track from the Norfolk Southern Railroad to Lockheed's Missile Transfer Facility. The facility assembles and tests missiles.

In December, Lockheed, the largest military contractor, began construction of a $27.62 million expansion in Courtland, and is rumored to be preparing for another expansion in 2009.

This expansion is to support the U.S. Department of Defense Agency's Targets and Countermeasures program--to assemble and test missiles. They were awarded the contract, which was and is expected to pay the company $4.6 billion in government funding over 10 years, in December 2003.

Although the US Defense budget is expected to rise only 14.3% over the next four years, this does not include special supplementary budgets for the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the war on terrorism. The five divisions of Lockheed Martin are Aeronautics (they produce the F-16, F-22, and F-35 fighter jets), Electronic Systems (missiles), Satellites, Integrated Systems for communication, and IT Systems. All of these divisions will benefit from the continuation of the wars.

Critics of companies like Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman, say that they are benefiting from war profiteering. Throughout this blog, I have also brought up expansions of companies making money, directly and indirectly, from world conflict (examples 1, 2, and 3).
The Pentagon's budget for 2007 is about $457 billion (with a proposed budget increase of 10% for 2008).

The expansion of the railroad in Alabama would be a tax on local government funding. The county is expected to pay for 3,240 feet of track, at a total estimated cost of $968,850. Supporters of the expansion hope that such an allowance from the government would spur economic development in the region.

The U.S. Army is expected to buy 80-100 Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) launchers and aover 1,400 THAAD missiles. The Defense Industry Daily reported that Lockheed Martin began production this year.

Sources: 24/7 Wall Street, The Decatur Daily, Space News, The Middle East Online, Defense Industry Daily, Military and Aerospace Electronics, Lockheed Martin

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Saturday, May 5, 2007

Knee Bend, Indiana

Zimmer Holdings Inc., a maker of surgical products such as hip, knee, and spinal implants, plans a $66 million expansion of its manufacturing facility in Warsaw, Indiana. The project will add 120,000 square feet to its manufacturing facility, 100,000 square feet to its distribution center, and more than 140 jobs in manufacturing and distribution by 2008. The company already hires 2,200 people in Warsaw, which is in Northern Indiana.

If Zimmer adds the jobs by 2008, it could receive up to $1.9 million in tax credits from the state.

Zimmer recently launched a direct marketing campaign for its Gender Solutions Knee for women. The new knee has been boosting Zimmer's sales of surgical products since it was introduced last year.




Sources: The Fort Wayne News Sentinel via AP, Zimmer, Trading Markets

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Friday, May 4, 2007

The Next Generation of Spokane

The Indian pharmaceutical company, Jubilant Organosys, announced last week that it paid $122.5 million cash (cash!) for the laboratories of HollisterStier, a Spokane-based pharmaceutical company. HollisterStier specializes in allergy-treatment shots, and Jubilant is an enormous pharmaceutical manufacturer.

Jubilant plans to complete a $30 million expansion (which began last year), adding 50,000 square-feet to the 150,000 square foot plant.

In other Spokane news, fifty-one low-income residents in a downtown Spokane building are wondering whether or not California-based BlueRay Tecnologies will be taking over the building. The company has already madea deposit on the three-story commercial building, and would like to drop $12 million to turn it into a manufacturing facility. The plant could employ up to 150 workers.

There is a catch, of course. BlueRay is trying to figure out whether the residents and the factory can coexist. The building was formerly an annex to a local hotel, featuring single-occupancy rooms that were subsidized by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. BlueRay's plans include disc-making equipment in the basement and facilities on the first floor, which could allow residents to remain upstairs

BlueRay makes "next generation DVDs." Now, what are next generation DVDs? Apparently, they have much more memory than regular DVDs. One reviewer wrote:

. . .the picture was crisper, the colours more vibrant and there was an almost hallucinogenic 3D-like quality to the film.

The high capacity of both new formats - 50GB for a dual-layer Blu-ray disc and 30GB for a dual-layer HD-DVD - also means that there is a potential for even more content.


This is an interesting project because this part of Spokane is known to have a higher crime rate, and most of the residents in the building suffer from mental illnesses and drug and alcohol abuse problems. If the company decides that they can't co-exist, it could be a struggle to find alternative housing. If they can coexist, BlueRay could be a role model for this type of expansion.

SOURCES: The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Spokesman Review, BBC

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Monday, April 30, 2007

Reminder: Tread Lightly Over Australian Land

The Sydney Morning Herald called this battle "David vs. Goliath." The Swiss mining company, Xstrata, was denied permissions to expand its zinc mining territory into aboriginal Australian land. The enormous mining company, which employs around 43,000 people worldwide, was planning a $92 million (US) expansion (which included diverting a RIVER by 5.5 kilometres) in Northern Australia. The Northern Land Council, which represents Aboriginal people in that area, mounted a legal challenge on behalf of the original owners, and won. The court found that the company had not followed the correct legal process.

More than 80% of the value of minerals extracted in the Northern Territory of Australia comes from mining on Aboriginal-owned land. The land is very resource-rich, and the rights are covered by the Land Rights Act and the Native Title Act, whereas Aboriginal communities can make agreements with companies regarding land use.

To refresh your Australian history, Aboriginal people are considered to have lived in Australia for at least 60,000 years, while European settlement began just over 200 years ago (in Northern Australia, colonisation began about 150 years ago. The traditional, Aboriginal landowners (similar to the struggles of the Native American people) found themselves excluded from or unable to control the land that they had owned and lived on, which led to the formation of an Aboriginal rights movement.

This morning, the local ABC affiliate in Australia reported:
In the first decade of the 21st Century the scourges of leprosy, rheumatic heart disease and tuberculosis still strike many Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders. Years after medicine and preventive care largely wiped them out in white populations in Australia.
A report to the World Health Organization has found that Aboriginal health lags a full century behind that of other Australians.
The report by researchers at the University of New South Wales suggests that symbolism is important, even in health care.
It says acknowledging past wrongs done to Aboriginal people would help improve their health.
With such a history, and the present reality, those wishing to do business in Australia are advised to consult with the traditional, as well as government, entities. And tread lightly.

-
Sources: The Australion, The Sydney Morning Herald, Reuters, Xstrata Corporate, The Northern Land Council, The ABC Message Stick

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Friday, April 27, 2007

Out of many, one. . .solution


This week, the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce met to discuss an important question: How do we create jobs in Jamaica?

According the Statistical Institute of Jamaica, the unemployment rate in 2006 hovered around 10 percent.

JCC President Mike Myers told the Caribbean Business Report radio show:
"Jamaica must think outside the box. We need to pick industries where we can compete globally. Then we need to offer incentives, that is, give tax breaks.
In a fascinating interview, the Jamaica Observer spoke with an anonymous retired manufacturer:
The government should embark on a program whereby manufacturers get free land in exchange for building factories and then declare no general consumption tax on Jamaican-made products. That would put idle land to use and give Jamaican products a 16.5 per cent advantage. This would give us a competitive edge and wean the population off foreign goods. Look at it this way, if foreign and Jamaican goods are the same price, people won't buy the local goods, but once Jamaican goods are cheaper people will buy.
The high cost of manufacturing in Jamaica, coupled with the lack of incentives, has not allowed Jamaica to compete globally with industrial countries. Developing solar energy, hydroelectricity, and agriculture would be a good start if Jamaica is ready to emerge as a global force. The Cotonou Agreement (part of the ACP agreementÐyou can view more about that in the last few paragraphs of an earlier post here) that Jamaica signed in 2000 means that the country has a much wider trading scope.

Sources: The Jamaica Observer, The Jamaica Chamber of Commerce, European Commission, The Statistical Institute of Jamaica

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Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Good News for Manufacturing


¥ According to a Commerce Department report today, US-made manufactured goods climbed 3.4% in March, and businesses are continuing to grow and expand. In a Bloomberg News article today, Adam York, an economist at Wachovia Corporation, was quoted as saying, "It's still too early to say manufacturing is completely on the mend, but this is a positive.''

¥ Alabama has announced a US$64.5m expansion of its facility in Lincoln, Alabama.

¥ Last week, the Chrysler Group announced that it will invest $700 million investment in Marysville, Michigan and create 1,000 jobs (see last week's blog).The Marysville factory is part of $1.78 billion of new investments that Chrysler announced for Michigan. "It's the biggest thing that's ever happened in our county," said Doug Alexander, executive director of the EDA of St. Clair County.

¥ Wyeth Laboratories, based in New Jersey, and the Irish government unveiled a joint$32.5 million plan today to strengthen the drugmaker's R&D operations in Ireland. Wyeth will expand its current 27,000-square-foot laboratory in West Dublin to more than 90,000 square feet.

¥ Roche Pharmaceuticals announced today that it will invest $60 million in a new multi-purpose production facility in Florence, SC.

Sources: Forbes via AP, Automotive World, The Voice, Bloomberg, International Herald Tribune, The Carolina Newswire,

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Thursday, April 19, 2007

In India, this one expansion means 15,000 jobs

India's largest IT services firm, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) announced plans today to invest Rs.4 billion, or over $95 million, to develop a facility on the outskirst of Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India. The facility, which is expected to be completed by 2013, will employ 15,000 people. This will take the total number of TCS employees to 89,000 in 47 countries.

TCS, whichis based in Mumbai, also expects to increase its staff in China by 5,000 over the next four years.

TCS hit a milestone this week, crossing US$4 billion in revenues for the first time. TCS's customers include IBM, Bank of China, Qantas Airlines. TCS was the first Indian software company to open an overseas office in New York.

Sources: India eNews, India PR Wire, The Financial Times, Economic Times India, The Telegraph, Business Week, Tata Consultancy Services

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Tuesday, April 17, 2007

BLACK HAWK UP


DynaBil Industries has announced plans for a $10 million, 50,000-square-foot expansion to its 65,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Coxsackie, NY. The project is expected to add 137 people over the next five years. DynaBil is eligible for $6 million in tax credits, incentives, and other benefits over the next 10 years, according to the Greene County Department of Planning and Economic Development.

DynaBil, a manufacturer of precision sheetmetal assemblies and components, supplies parts for the Sikorsky Blackhawk helicopter and Boeing's 787 Dreamliner, as well as parts for Lockheed Martin, Bombardier, Bell Canada, Israel Aircraft Industries, and Spirit Aerosystems.

The continuing U.S. involvement in the Middle East has continued demand for the Blackhawk, which is used by the military in Iraq and Afghanistan. "We've been at it for 30 years now and it is the best cycle I've ever seen," DynaBil President Hugh Quigley said.

The company makes more than 100 parts for the UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter. The Army, with 1,500 of the aircraft in its fleet, put 240,000 flight hours on its Iraq-based helicopters in 2005. The number of flight hours increased to 334,000 in 2006, and is expected to hit 400,000 hours in 2007.

See, keeping track of these types of business expansions is really like keeping track of this war. I also posted earlier on Spartan Chassis and GE Aviation, who both make parts for military vehicles and planes.

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Monday, April 16, 2007

GE Aviation to expand its jet engine manufacturing

The Rutland Herald reported today that GE will break ground next month on a $4.5 million, 27,000-square-foot addition to its facility in Rutland Town, VT. GE Aviation handed its Rutland operation the assignment of making parts for the company's latest commercial aircraft jet engine. The company will also invest millions more on machinery and equipment to make the new blades. The GE plant has undergone several expansions over the years and is now 289,2933 square feet and has about 1,200 employees.
The spokesperson for GE said that with military orders on decline, the order has come along "just at the right time."

Speaking of a decline in military spending, the San Diego Business Journal just published an article on the 800 area-manufacturing jobs lost in the past year. The article sites a study by the San Diego Chamber of Commerce that says:
. . .manufacturing benefits the most from the business created by defense spending. Defense-related manufacturing supports more than 19,800 jobs and $4.5 billion in economic output. The professional, scientific and technical services sector was second, with military spending generating $2.4 billion, and more than 19,000 jobs for those sectors.
I was blogging about this last week, as presently we are seeing some US manufacturers struggling and some benefiting from this stage of the Iraq conflict.

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Friday, April 13, 2007

Expansion News and Views: From Lights to Fights

aHoward Industries announced yesterday that they will be expanding their Laurel, MS manufacturing facility by 550,000 square feet. Employees design and manufacture power transformers, which can weigh as much as 300,000 pounds and cost up to $1.5 million. Howard also manufactures indoor and outdoor lighting supplies, among many other products.
Governor Haley Barbour compared the Howard expansion to the recent Toyota expansion in Blue Springs, MS (which is covered in April's Business Facilities Magazine). "Good things."

aSpeaking of Toyota, Toyota Boshoku America announced this week that they will locate its North American office in the CirclePort Business Park in Erlanger, Kentucky. Toyota Boshoku will occupy 23,000 square feet of Class A office space in the Dolwick Business Center, 11 miles south of Cincinnati.They will also receive $2.1 million in tax incentives. Toyota Boshuku, based in Japan, produces automobile interiors.

aAnd speaking of cars, Spartan Chassis, Inc., a subsidiary of Spartan Motors, Inc. announced this week that they purchased two manufacturing facilities near its headquarters in Charlotte, MI. The facilities, totaling 80,000 square-feet, will manufacture components for Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles. Spartan will spend around $8 million to get this facility up and running this year. The MRAP vehicles are designed to protect their occupants from a combination of mines, rocket-propelled grenades, or RPGs, and improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, through their V-shaped hull, raised chassis and improved armor. According to U.S. government reports, roadside bombs and IEDs account for 70 percent of U.S. deaths and injuries in Iraq.

With U.S. troops tours of duty recently extended in Iraq, and a questionable time frame for the end of the war over there, the Pentagon is spending over $400 billion this year on the war. This might benefit some manufacturers, which we can watch through their physical expansions. If the market is there, no matter how controversial, somebody will fill it.

Business Blogs & Directory

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Previous 10 Posts

The Blago Infamy Factory Expands
Paging Little Caesar
Hydrogen bombshell
POTUS envy
Best Idea of the Week: Retrofitting ASAP
Sacks of gold
Final edition
Worst, er, Best Idea of the Week: No Blagojevich!
TARP cop turns up heat on Treasury chief
Worst Idea of the Week: Texas or Somalia?

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