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Gas
Drilling Boom Brings New Life To
Steel Industry
by Jeff Brady
October 13, 2011
A
natural gas drilling boom in
Pennsylvania is helping the economies of Rust Belt cities long
accustomed to
bad news. Drilling requires steel — lots of it — and that has
manufacturers
expanding and hiring new workers.
While
much attention has been paid to
the environmental risks of drilling into the Marcellus Shale, the
economic
benefits have been less prominent in the national discussion. But in
Youngstown, Ohio, locals have been watching an old industry come back
to life.
The
Brier Hill neighborhood, northwest
of downtown Youngstown, has been relatively quiet for the past few
decades
since the huge steel mills there shut down. But today it’s noisy again,
with
trains passing each other on the tracks and heavy construction under
way.
“What’s
really exciting to me is that
for many, many years this area was the poster child for the Rust Belt
economy,”
says Walter Good, vice president of economic development for the
Youngstown/Warren Regional Chamber.
It’s
his job to attract new companies,
and the natural gas drilling boom in nearby Pennsylvania is making that
a lot
easier.
“The
phone is definitely ringing
more,” Good says.
New
Construction
Controversial
technologies like
hydraulic fracturing, combined with horizontal drilling, allow
production
companies to now bring vast quantities of gas p to the surface.
In
January through August of this
year, 1,242 wells were drilled into the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania
alone.
Each one needs thousands of feet of steel pipe.
That’s
why the French company
Vallourec is building a new $650 million mill in Youngstown. The
green-roofed
facility is huge — about 1 million square feet.
Joel
Mastervich, the president and COO
of Vallourec’s U.S. company, V&M Star, says Youngstown was an
attractive
place to build the new seamless pipe mill because the infrastructure
and
experienced workforce are already in place. Plus, it’s close to the
Marcellus
Shale.
“We’ll
be able to produce the pipe,
finish it here and send it to a customer that’s, maybe, 100 miles
away,” says
Mastervich.
Production
is expected to begin in a
few months, but already the Brier Hill neighborhood is perking back up.
Stacey
Seidita recently opened a sandwich shop in a brick building that had
been empty
for years.
With
about 1,000 construction workers
building the mill and the promise of 350 permanent workers down the
road,
launching her business now made sense.
“My
father’s a contractor and he’s
been telling me for a little while that V&M is going to really
start, so
that’s when I found this building and decided it was time,” says
Seidita.
Ripple
Effects
Around
the region, you can find many
stories of businesses doing well because of the drilling boom —
especially in
Pennsylvania. U.S. Steel executive Doug Matthews says he had difficulty
finding
a hotel room in the small town of Williamsport last winter.
“That
was a little bit surprising,” he
says.
Matthews
is the senior vice president
of tubular operations at U.S. Steel — his division makes the pipes and
tubes
the gas drilling industry uses.
U.S.
Steel is based in Pittsburgh and
is still a big driver for the local economy. When it does well, so do
its
contractors, like Chapman Corp. in Washington, Pa.
Crews
there are building a large new
fabrication shop, as many engineering and construction firms are laying
people
off.
“The
$6 million investment that we’re
putting into our new fabrication facility shows our confidence that the
Marcellus Shale play is here to stay,” says Rich Tomsic, vice president
for
sales and marketing.
That
almost certainly will lead to
more jobs in the region. It already has at a time much of the rest of
the
country is suffering.
By
The Numbers
Pennsylvania’s
Department of Labor and
Industry collects specific data on how many people have been hired
because of
the natural-gas drilling boom. Hiring for “core-related industries” has
spiked
from 5,501 in 2008 to 11,913 this year.
“This
is almost 117 percent growth,”
says Sue Mukherjee, director of the agency’s Center for Workforce
Information
and Analysis.
Mukherjee
says 71 percent of the new
hires have been Pennsylvania residents and the jobs pay well — $76,000
a year,
on average.
Her
statistics show an uptick in jobs
related to gas production, too, such as truck drivers, civil engineers
and
mechanics.
New
jobs also are being added in areas
you might not imagine at first. This summer the Sierra Club hired Deb
Nardone
to direct its Natural Gas Reform campaign in Pennsylvania.
Nardone
says she’d like to see the
state hire more regulators to look over the shoulders of drillers.
“And
also an increase in staff that
are doing research ... collecting good science ... [and] monitoring the
environmental
impacts, whether it’s air quality or water quality,” she says.
But
while there are plenty of profits
for the natural gas industry to hire new employees, nonprofit groups
and state
governments are having a much tougher time finding money to do that.
Read
it at National Public Radio
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