As spring temperatures began
thawing winter's frozen turf, Pennsylvania's elected officials at the local,
county and state levels began noticing green shoots in the economy across the
state.
April, in fact, was a very
strong month, as Pennsylvania was the only state in the Northeast to add more
than 10,000 jobs that month.
"Employment growth [for
the state] has been accelerating since the start of the year and the mix of
jobs has improved," says Ryan Sweet, an economist for Moody's Analytics.
"High-wage industries have accounted for the bulk of the net job gains.
That's a noticeable shift from the past several years when low-paying
industries were the primary driver," Sweet explained.
" We are a different company than we
were a few years ago. We are competing for talent all over the world, and we have to
offer something special."
-
Brian Roberts, Chairman and CEO, Comcast
Many of the flagship projects
are coming from overseas. Pennsylvania was one of only three states to post
positive growth in foreign direct investment in 2013 over 2012, according to
the Financial Times. And 2014 is shaping up as another year of accelerating
growth, according to the state's Department of Community and Economic
Development (DCED). Here are a few examples of recent recruits:
- Charles & Alice Group, a leading French manufacturer of apple sauce in Europe, committed to leasing a 55,000-sq.-ft. (5,110-sq.-m.) processing plant in East Hempfield Township, Lancaster County. It's creating 50 jobs and will spend more than $10 million in leasehold improvements.
- Fuling Plastics USA, Inc., a fully owned subsidiary of Taizhou Fuling Plastics Co., based in Zhejing Province in Eastern China, selected Allentown in Lehigh County for a manufacturing and distribution facility. Established in 1992, Fuling is a major supplier of plastic cutlery, dining kits, drinking straws and tableware to the food service industry.
- Greiner Packaging, a subsidiary of Austria-based Greiner Packaging International, recently signed a lease for 113,000 sq. ft. (10,450 sq. m.) of manufacturing space in Pittston Township. It's investing $17 million in equipment to produce high-quality cups and lids as well as other convenience and sustainable items for the food industry. It has committed to hiring 128 employees within the next three years.
- Australian-based energy and water efficiency company Ecosave selected the Navy Yard in Philadelphia for the location of its US headquarters, creating 125 new jobs.
Leading Trends: FDI, Energy,
E-Commerce
Wilfred Muskens, deputy
director of Pennsylvania's Office of International Business Development (OIBD),
attributes the state's FDI successes to its now well established global
overseas network covering 23 countries and 22 overseas trade offices, increased
marketing initiatives (including hosting this year's WORLD FORUM for Foreign
Direct Investment in Philadelphia) and a series of business development
missions led by Governor Tom Corbett to France and Germany in 2012 and Brazil
and Chile in 2013.
"Another important key
to our success is Pennsylvania's proximity to key North American markets,"
Muskens says. "We're within a long day's drive of 60 percent of the US and
Canadian populations. We have a skilled workforce, low-cost and less volatile
electricity and abundant water resources."
OBID, a division within the
Department of Community and Economic Development, is responsible for
contributing to the growth and strength of the commonwealth's economy by
attracting foreign investment to the state and providing value-added
international trade services to Pennsylvania's businesses and ports.
At a recent groundbreaking,
Gov. Corbett said Pennsylvania is now home to nearly 6,000 foreign-owned
businesses employing more than 250,000 people, including world-class companies
such as Shire Pharmaceuticals, Siemens Healthcare, B. Braun, Almac, and Nestlé.
Additionally, more than 15,000 Pennsylvania businesses sell goods and services
abroad; these exports support more than 400,000 jobs, he said.
" We're within a long day's drive of 60
percent of the US and Canadian populations. We have a skilled workforce, low-cost
and less volatile electricity and abundant water resources."
-
Wilfred Muskens, Deputy Director, Pennsylvania's Office of International
Business Development (OIBD)
Additional trends identified
by Moody's Analytics include the emergence of e-commerce as an important
economic driver in Central Pennsylvania. In Lancaster County, fulfillment
centers under construction for Forever 21, Nordstrom and Urban Outfitters are projected
to employ up to 3,000 people in the coming years, likely creating opportunities
that will spill over into nearby counties such as York and Reading, says
economist Adam Kamins. Harrisburg, he notes, is already home to an Amazon
fulfillment center (as is Allentown).
Natural gas exploration in
the Marcellus Shale is giving a significant boost to Williamsport's economy.
Its metro area is outperforming the state and the US, and prospects for future
drilling are bright, Kamins says.
"Williams Partners LP is
considering building a $2.1-billion pipeline through Williamsport to link
Marcellus Shale gas production areas to heavily populated East Coast
markets," he adds. "The pipeline would create construction jobs and,
more importantly, lift impact fees revenues for Williamsport."
Pennsylvania Projects:
August 2014
·
AmerisourceBergen, a
global pharmaceutical services company, is expanding in Conshohocken,
Montgomery Co., and adding nearly 200 jobs to a life sciences industry that
employs more than 79,000 in Pennsylvania. The company will lease and renovate
Millennium III, an existing 70,000-sq.-ft. (6,500-sq.-m.) office building and
retain 1,200 existing Pennsylvania-based positions, 850 of which are in the
Philadelphia area. Part of Gov. Corbett's JOBS1st PA initiative, the project
will create at least 185 new jobs over the next three years. The company plans
to make a multi-million dollar investment at the site, and the expansion is
expected to be completed by end of 2014.
·
Panda Power Funds
broke ground August 12th on an 829-MW natural-gas fueled power plant in
Lycoming County that will power up to 1 million homes and contribute an
estimated $5.85 billion to the local economy within the first 10 years of
operation. The plant, deliberately sited in the heart of the Marcellus Shale,
is expected to create 500 construction jobs, 27 permanent positions, and 45
indirect jobs in the local community. The company says the "Patriot"
facility will be one of the cleanest natural gas-fueled power plants in the
nation, using state-of-the-art emissions-control technology. The plant is
expected to be fully operational in 2016.
·
Siemens Rail
Automation will add 129 new jobs in Allegheny County when it expands
engineering capabilities in Pittsburgh. The company has leased a site in
Homestead in order to increase its engineering and production capabilities.
Siemens will consolidate two locations in the Pittsburgh region to the site in
Homestead. The company plans to invest more than $1 million at the new site.
Something Special' in Philly
Philadelphia, the state's
largest metro area, continues to score large-scale construction projects to
meet the needs of office tenants. In University City - home to the University
of Pennsylvania, Drexel University, the University City Science Center and the
Children's Hospital of Pennsylvania - groundbreaking for the 49-story,
861,000-sq.-ft. (79,987-sq.-m.) FMC Tower took place in May. The
building will contain 268 luxury apartments in addition to serving as the
chemical company's global headquarters.
An adjacent 33-story tower,
known as Evo, will contain upscale housing and amenities for graduate students
and young professionals. Brandywine Realty Trust is developing both projects.
They cap Brandywine's pioneering 2.7-million-sq.-ft. (250,830-sq.-m.) mixed-use
development along the western bank of the Schuylkill River.
In July, Liberty Property
Trust started construction on the Comcast Innovation and Technology Center, a
$1.3-billion mixed-use glass tower that will be the tallest building in
Philadelphia and the tallest skyscraper outside of New York City and Chicago
when it opens in 2018. Comcast has signed a 20-year lease for 75 percent
of the building's office space. A 222-room Four Seasons Hotel will occupy the
top floors.
Brian Roberts, chairman and
CEO of Comcast, said his goal is to create a "vertical urban campus"
that can compete with Google or Facebook suburban-style headquarters space.
Instead of offices, the building will be mostly broken into lofts to meet the
needs of Comcast's tech-savvy workforce.
"We are a different
company than we were a few years ago," said Roberts at the official
groundbreaking ceremony. "We are competing for talent all over the world,
and we have to offer something special."
In suburban Philadelphia, the
region's biggest fixer-up project is taking place in Malvern, Chester County,
the epi-center of greater Philadelphia's biotech and technology corridor. Saint-Gobain,
the French construction and building materials maker that traces its history
back to the construction of Versailles (it celebrates its 350th anniversary
next year), has master-planned the 65-acre (26-hectare) corporate campus with
developer Eli Kahn and J. Loew Associates, both of Downingtown, in
collaboration with Aegon Realty Advisors.
The former dated headquarters
of the Aegon Group will be transformed into a LEED-certified building for Saint
Gobain and its North American construction materials subsidiary, CertainTeed
Corp. More than 800 employees will occupy the leased 320,000 sq. ft. (29,728
sq. m.) of office and research space. The firms will use their own construction
materials for the project.
Like Roberts, John Crowe, who
oversees the US operations of the world's largest building materials firm,
wants to create an architecturally exciting workplace that will appeal to
today's millenials and is "energy efficient, has superior air quality and
moisture management, and makes a material difference in the comfort and health
of employees."
Source: Site Selection
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