|
Lilly, Target
lead expansions list for 2002
Biggest
Projects of 2002
1. Eli Lilly and Company: a $425 million
insulin factory in Prince William County, employing
700
2. Tenaska Inc.: a $400 million power plant
near Scottsville that will employ 30
3. Philip Morris USA will add a $125 million
cigarette operation in South Richmond
4. Target Corp.: a $65 million distribution
center in Suffolk that will employ 500
5. Pepsi Bottling Group Inc.: a $65 million
plant in Wythe County employing 200
6. Dupont: an Advanced Fibers Division worth
$57 million in Chesterfield County
7. SYSCO Corp.: food service storage in Warren
County at $53 million with 388 jobs.
8. BAE Systems: a division headquarters in
Fairfax for $51.6 million with 1,000 jobs
9. Star Scientific Inc.: $49.9 million on
a plant in Mecklenburg County, employing 31
10. Rubbermaid Commercial Products Inc.:
a $45 million plastics facility in Winchester, employing
250
2002 announcements are preliminary
and are subject to revision; does not include five
unannounced projects that will invest a total of
$49.9 million and employ 1,613.
Data: Virginia Economic Development Partnership;
Virginia Business
|
by
Peter Galuszka
Virginia Business
April 2003
Nagging
economic uncertainties continue to fester as they have
for nearly three years. Yet, Virginians can take heart
about the states attractiveness as a good place
to locate new factories. Against lingering gloom of
a weak economy and war, the Old Dominion pretty much
held its own as far as corporate expansions in 2002.
The dollar total of new deals was $2.42 billion
off from $2.7 billion the year before. Yet the projects
will create more jobs 30,675 compared
to 28,000 in 2001.
As
is typical, most of the new plant sites were in the
richest parts of the state cutting a crescent from Northern
Virginia south to Richmond and then southeast to Hampton
Roads. Yet last year, there was a positive, countervailing
trend. Of the top 25 announced projects, nine were in
the Southside and Southwest regions where textile and
coal industries have been hard hit by global competition
and bad markets, showing that economic development activity
there has become vigorous. All in all, says Mark R.
Kilduff, executive director of the Virginia Economic
Development Partnership, These results are not
record-breaking but are impressive in a weak global
economic climate.
Statewide,
the single biggest deal was the type that just about
every community wants. Drug-maker Eli Lilly and Company
announced plans to build a $425 million factory to make
insulin in Prince William County. Officials say it will
create 700 new jobs with an average salary of $44,000.
Site Selection magazine hailed Virginias coup,
noting that the Old Dominion beat out North and South
Carolina for the plant the first one that Indianapolis-based
Eli Lilly will build in the U.S. outside of Indiana.
What
nailed the deal was a sweet package of goodies, including
a $3 million grant from the Virginia Investment Partnership,
a $2.2 million grant from the Governors Opportunity
Fund and another $2 million from Prince William County.
Another benefit is that the Lilly operation will help
George Mason University with its ambitious plans to
grow biotechnology in Northern Virginia, which already
is well saturated with savvy people skilled in engineering.
The
No. 2 project overall was a $400 million gas-fired power
station near Scottsville that will produce 886 megawatts
of power. A so-called merchant plant because
it will add to the energy wholesale market during times
of peak demand, the project is being built by Tenaska,
a power engineering company based in Nebraska. The plant
is one of scores that had been planned throughout the
state to take advantage of Virginias strategic
location where major gas pipelines and high-voltage
power lines intersect. However, many of the merchant
plants are in jeopardy because electricity deregulation,
which will help build markets for them, has slowed down.
Strategic
location was another reason for the third-largest expansion
a $125 million distribution center for Target
Inc. in Suffolk. The warehouse complex, which will handle
imports of goods that Target will distribute at all
of its stores east of the Mississippi River, is another
major win for state and business officials, led by the
Virginia Port Authority. The port of Hampton Roads will
benefit from imports of goods, many from China whose
entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001 has
boosted its exports of consumer items immensely. Like
the Eli Lilly case, Virginia faced stiff competition,
this time from ports in Charleston, S.C., and Savannah,
Ga., for the Target prize. Other parts of the state
had a more mixed record.
Of
more than 300 projects only about 15 percent were in
the Southside and Southwest parts of the state, showing,
once again, that snaring new industries is a tougher
pull for them. However, they did manage to win some
of the biggest deals. One, for example, was a Universal
Leaf Tobacco Co. leaf processing plant in Danville worth
$28 million.
Return
to Virginia Business - April 2003
|
|