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Released April 13, 2018 | SUGAR LAND
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Researched by Industrial Info Resources (Sugar Land, Texas)--Siemens AG's (Munich, Germany) slate of U.S.-based projects is dominated by the booming U.S. market for natural gas development, where the engineering giant is servicing multiple projects in every geographic region. Industrial Info is tracking nearly $8 billion in active U.S. projects involving Siemens, more than 86% of which is attributed to the 10 highest-valued projects. About 30% of the total is nearing or under construction.

AttachmentClick on the image at right for a graph detailing the top 10 U.S. states for Siemens-related projects, by investment value.

Ohio and Pennsylvania alone account for about 60% of the $8 billion in active projects, driven largely by demand for natural gas-fired, combined-cycle (NGCC) power plants fueled by output from the Marcellus and Utica shale plays. One of the largest is under construction and set to be completed in the coming months: Pure Energy Resources LLC's (Burlington, Massachusetts) $890 million Lordstown Energy Center in Lordstown, Ohio, which will generate 800 megawatts (MW) from a pair of gas turbines and a steam turbine, all supplied by Siemens.

Siemens is attached to another Pure Energy Resources project for same Lordstown site: the $860 million Trumbull Energy Center. Siemens would supply two combustion turbines and a steam turbine with a total output of 940 MW. But this project is tied up in the courts: Although the Ohio Power Siting Board granted permission to build the second plant in October, the developers of the two projects are disputing whether those of the Lordstown Energy Center should comply with a judge's order last year to agree to the "covenants and restrictions" of the industrial park in which both are site. If there is no agreement on the covenants and restrictions, it could prevent the second power plant from being built, according to local newspaper The Vindicator.

If approved, the Trumbull Energy Center would begin construction in spring, at the very earliest. Later in the year, CME Energy LLC (Boston, Massachusetts) is slated to begin construction on an $860 million unit addition at the Oregon Clean Energy Center in Oregon, Ohio, which will use two combustion turbines and a condensing-heat steam turbine from Siemens to generate 955 MW. The power produced will supplement an 800-MW plant that finished construction in August 2017, also with Siemens turbines. For more information, see Industrial Info's project reports on the Lordstown Energy Center, Trumbull Energy Center and Oregon Clean Energy Center.

In Pennsylvania, American Power Ventures LLC (Bernardsville, New Jersey) is expected to begin construction in the coming months on the $1 billion Renaissance Energy Center in Carmichaels. The NGCC facility is expected to generate 1,000 MW from two combustion turbines and a steam turbine. A little more than 50 miles north, Champion Processing Incorporated (Wexford, Pennsylvania) is proposing the $1.16 billion Beech Hollow Power Station in Burgettstown, another NGCC facility that would generate 1,054 MW from two combustion turbines and a steam turbine. For more information, see Industrial Info's project reports on the Renaissance Energy Center and Beech Hollow Power Station.

Illinois and North Carolina only have three Siemens-related projects between them, but all are among the nation's 10 highest-valued. EmberClear Corporation (Calgary, Alberta) has proposed the $812 million Sangamon County Power Station in or near Pawnee, Illinois, an NCGG plant that would generate 850 MW from a pair of combustion turbines and a steam turbine, all from Siemens, while Duke Energy Corporation (NYSE:DUK) (Charlotte, North Carolina) is considering $400 million Phase I and $400 million Phase II combustion turbine additions at a power station in Stanley, North Carolina. Each of the simple-cycle turbines would generate 400 MW. For more information, see Industrial Info's reports on the Sangamon County Power Station and Phase I and Phase II of the Duke project.

Rounding out the top six states for Siemens-related projects are New Mexico, where Pattern Energy Group (NASDAQ:PEGI) (San Francisco, California) is considering Siemens technology to develop its proposed $420 million Grady Wind Facility in Clovis, which is expected to generate 220.8 MW from 96 turbines, and Massachusetts, where Siemens' own subsidiary, Siemens Healthineers Incorporated, is at work on a $300 million renovation and expansion at a diagnostics plant in East Walpole. For more information, see Industrial Info's reports on the Grady Wind Facility and diagnostics project.

Industrial Info Resources (IIR), with global headquarters in Sugar Land, Texas, six offices in North America and 12 international offices, is the leading provider of global market intelligence specializing in the industrial process, heavy manufacturing and energy markets. Industrial Info's quality-assurance philosophy, the Living Forward Reporting Principle™, provides up-to-the-minute intelligence on what's happening now, while constantly keeping track of future opportunities. Follow IIR on: Facebook - Twitter - LinkedIn. For more information on our coverage, send inquiries to info@industrialinfo.com or visit us online at http://www.industrialinfo.com/.
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