China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Yuhuang’s methanol project gains momentum

- By LIU YINMENG in New Orleans, Louisiana teresaliu@chinadaily­usa.com

Charlie Yao has a plan. He wanted to build a $1.85 billion methanol production facility on 1,200-acres of farmland in St. James Parish, Louisiana.

A little over a week ago, he moved one step closer to achieving his dream.

Yuhuang Chemical Industries Inc. (YCI), a wholly owned subsidiary of Shandong Yuhuang Chemical Company, Ltd., announced on Aug 23 that it has entered into a business agreement with the Wichita, Kansas-based Koch Methanol Investment, a company that distribute­s chemicals. As part of the deal, Koch has acquired an indirect minority equity interest in YCI Methanol One, LLC.

The deal also gives Koch affiliates methanol offtake rights from the Yuhuang facility, as well as the right to construct, own and operate the methanol terminal assets for the outbound flow via ship, rail and truck.

“The decision by Koch Methanol to invest in YCI Methanol sends a clear signal to the industry about the strength of this facility,” said Yao, CEO and president of YCI.

“The new facility is located in a region with convenient access to natural gas, a highly skilled workforce, and world class transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, allowing us to be very competitiv­e in our production and distributi­on,” Yao said. “If viable, there is also sufficient land to add a second and third plant.”

Located in a strategic location near the Mississipp­i River, YCI is the biggest green-field investment in methanol by a Chinese company in Louisiana.

The company’s corporate office is located in Houston, while the land for its production facility, which was purchased in 2015, is located in St. James Parish, Louisiana.

Yao said he chose the Louisiana location because the state government offered better incentives and the site also has easy access to railroad and waterway, which will help delivery of the company’s products.

The Houston office employs around 60 people, and the St. James Parish complex employs around 30 people, Yao said. Almost all of the workers are local hires.

According to Yao, the idea for YCI got hatched in 2009 when Wang Jinshu, chairman of Yuhuang Chemical, decided to take his business outside China.

“He chose the US because it has a big market for methanol, and it also has lower costs for natural gas, a feedstock for methanol,” Yao said.

Methanol is a chemical used in the manufactur­ing of numerous every-day consumer products, such as paints, plastics, furniture and carpeting. It is produced from synthetic gas, which could be made from biomass, agricultur­al and timber waste, solid municipal waste and a number of other feedstock.

According to Marketsand­Markets, which provides industry research for companies, the global methanol market is expected to reach $54.16 billion by 2021. The global production of methanol is 40 million tons per year.

A 2017 report from IHS Markit shows that Northeast Asia, which also accounts for 54 percent of global methanol capacity, is the world’s largest consuming region for methanol. It’s followed by North America, Western Europe, Middle East and Southeast Asia.

YCI announced the St. James project in 2014, and Yao, a former general manager at Shell with over 10 years of industrial technical and manufactur­ing experience under his belt, officially took the reins as the company’s CEO the same year.

Yao said YCI gave him a platform for building a startup company. In addition, he was very impressed by Wang’s determinat­ion and vision.

The project also caught the eye of Bank of China, which arranged a syndicatio­n loan of $800 million for the company.

“The management group of Yuhuang is very determined, responsibl­e and profession­al,” said Xu Chen, president and CEO of Bank of China USA and the chairman of China General Chamber of Commerce-USA, which serves 1,500 Chinese member companies.

Based on sharp judgment and years of experience in the industry, Yao decided to purchase steel from the US market when the Trump administra­tion took over. That decision prevented the company from being affected by the tariffs that the administra­tion later placed on imported steel.

Xu said the investment environmen­t for overseas Chinese companies is important, but it is also essential for the companies to be profession­al and confident about their own operations in order to succeed.

Yao said commercial production of methanol for YCI is expected to begin in mid 2020.

Around 60 to 70 percent of its products will be sold to customers in the US, while 20 to 30 percent go to the Chinese market, and 10 percent will be delivered to Europe.

The plant is projected to create 100 permanent jobs, while constructi­on of the facilities will result in 1,000 constructi­on jobs.

 ?? LIU YINMENG/CHINA DAILY ?? Yuhuang Chemical Industries Inc. (YCI), a wholly owned subsidiary of Shandong Yuhuang Chemical Company, Ltd in St. James Parish, Louisiana, seen under constructi­on on Aug. 30, 2018. Commercial production of methanol for YCI’s $1.85 billion methanol complex is expected to begin in mid-2020.
LIU YINMENG/CHINA DAILY Yuhuang Chemical Industries Inc. (YCI), a wholly owned subsidiary of Shandong Yuhuang Chemical Company, Ltd in St. James Parish, Louisiana, seen under constructi­on on Aug. 30, 2018. Commercial production of methanol for YCI’s $1.85 billion methanol complex is expected to begin in mid-2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States