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· At The Chem Show, McIlvaine Organized Route Maps By Specific Application
· Scrubber/Adsorber Newsletter Headlines – December 2013
· Chemical Update Headlines - December 2013
· GDP Update Headlines - December 2013
At the Chem Show, McIlvaine organized route maps by specific application. So under Organic Chemicals and Scrubbers you saw the following:
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Exhibitors:
Andritz, Booth #126 Contact: Josh Hannah, Cell: 513-315-5025, Josh.Hannah@andritz.com Jim McGillicuddy, 859-992-7538, Jim.McGillicuddy@andritz.com Mike Hoelzle, Cell: 614-893-4684, Mike.Hoelzle@andritz.com http://atl.g.andritz.com/c/com2011/00/01/04/10473/1/1/0/929716576/se-references-kerteh.pdf
Emerson Process Management, Booth #823 CEMS System Capabilities for the Hydrocarbon Processing Industry
Hydro Carbon Processing, Booth #524
KC Cottrell Inc., Booth # 836 Contact: Mike Widico, Phone: 908-304-2004, mwidico@kccottrell.us
8 Bartles Corner Road, Suite 204, Flemington, NJ 08822
KC
Cottrell, Inc. New precipitator orders and other news from KC Cottrell
MEGTEC Systems, Inc., Booth #337 Contact: Mary Van Vonderen, Cell: 920-360-2170, Email: mvanvonderen@megtec.com MEGTEC products to meet Boiler MACT MEGTEC products for gas cleaning and purification of solvents http://www.megtec.com/scrubbers
Spraying Systems, Booth #730 http://www.spray.com/markets_and_applications/petrochemical.aspx
Veolia Water Solutions & Technologies, Booth #344
Contact: Rick Merryman, Cell: 412-915-7539; Presentation: Veolia ZLD Process for FGD Wastewater
SCRUBBER/ADSORBER December 2013 No. 474
SHIP EMISSIONS
AUTOMOTIVE
WASTE-TO-ENERGY
MARKETS
COMPANY NEWS
REGULATIONS
The Scrubber/Adsorber/Biofilter Newsletter is included in two services. For more information on Scrubber/Adsorber/Biofilter Knowledge Systems, click on: http://home.mcilvainecompany.com/index.php/other/2-uncategorised/96-2abc For more information on Scrubber/Adsorber/Biofilter World Markets, click on: http://home.mcilvainecompany.com/index.php/services-drop-down. |
CHEMICAL UPDATE
DECEMBER 2013
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INDUSTRY
U.S. Chemicals Exports to Increase from Shale Gas Advantage
Shale Gas Makes U.S. Among Cheapest Places for Plastics Manufacturing
Brazil Ramps Up Fertilizer Production Amid Growing Agricultural Demand
COMPANY NEWS
Honeywell to Invest $300 Million to Build New Refrigerant Plant
Formosa Plastics Group Plans $2 Billion Expansion of Texas Operations
Norway’s Yara and BASF Plan Investment in U.S. Ammonia Plant
Solvay Divests PVC and Compounding Businesses
Kumho Petro Produces Carbon Nanotubes
For more information on Scrubber/Adsorber/Biofilter World Markets, click on: http://home.mcilvainecompany.com/index.php/services-drop-down
GDP UPDATE HEADLINES
December 2013
AMERICAS
EUROPE / AFRICA / MIDDLE EAST
AMERICAS - United States
(1.) The U.S. probably expanded faster in the third quarter than initially estimated and weekly jobless claims likely rose a bit, according to economists polled by MarketWatch. Gross domestic product for the July-to-September period is forecast to be revised up to 3.2% from 2.8%, largely because inventories rose even faster than the preliminary report showed. Jobless claims, meanwhile, are predicted to increase to 325,000 in the week ended Nov. 30 from 316,000 in the prior week.
(2.) Austrian school economist Mark Skousen has labored mightily for a quarter of a century to persuade the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) to publish a better measure of economic activity in the United States, and beginning in April, the BEA will start publishing the country’s Gross Output — the GO.
Said Skousen, “Starting [in] 1990, I have made the case that we needed a new statistic beyond GDP that measures spending throughout the entire production process, not just final output. GO is a move in that direction — a personal triumph 25 years in the making.”
Ever since the establishment of the international monetary system at the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944, the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has informed and driven monetary policy, often with unintended and unhappy consequences. By misreading economic activity, interventionist politicians and economists have implemented policies that have later turned out to be too little too late or, more recently, way too much. The GO, on the other hand, measures intermediate economic activity at all stages of production, from raw materials to the retail outlet.
As Skousen explained, “While GDP is a good measure of national economic performance, it has a major flaw: in limiting itself to final output, GDP largely ignores or downplays the “make” economy — that is, the supply chain and intermediate stages of production needed to produce all those finished goods and services.
“This narrow focus of GDP has created much mischief in the media, government policy and boardroom decision-making….
“Since consumer spending [under GDP analysis] represents 70% or more of GDP … the media naively concludes that any slowdown in retail sales or government stimulus is necessarily bad for the economy….
“In short, by focusing only on final output, GDP underestimates the money spent and economic activity generated at earlier stages in the production process….
“Using GO as a more comprehensive measure of economic activity, spending by consumers turns out to represent around 40% of total year sales, not 70% as commonly reported.
“Spending by business … is substantially bigger, representing over 50% of economic activity.”
This aligns better with common-sense economic theory as well, that production precedes consumption, not the other way around. GO will also show that the real size of the U.S. economy isn't $16.8 trillion as is commonly acknowledged, but will come in at nearly twice that figure when it is released in April, according to Skousen.
Even so, with the update in place, GO will still leave out enormous parts of the economy, and will fail to measure the unmeasurables, such as quality of life, speed of information via the Internet, and caring for children at home by parents. It will fail to differentiate between “wasteful” spending — i.e., foreign wars and consequent loss of life and limb and destruction of property and war matériel — and “productive” spending. It will fail to measure the potential advantage of obtaining a college degree, or the disadvantage of taking up smoking.
It will count legal fees, repairing of property damage, and medical expenses as positives instead of negatives. It will allow for such silliness as counting the value of a new home being built, as well as the cost of razing it following a flood or a hurricane. It will count disasters as positives and imports of superior goods from abroad (instead of buying inferior ones locally) as negatives. It will continue to count borrowing as a good thing no matter how it is spent or by whom: individuals or governments. (The remaining text is not included in this sample.)
ASIA - Japan
Japan's economy expanded at a slower pace than initially estimated in the third quarter of 2013, according to the government, sparking concern that the government's "Abenomics" policy mix may fail to help the nascent recovery gain momentum.
The world's third-biggest economy grew at an annualized rate of 1.1% in the three months through September in inflation-adjusted terms, downgraded from preliminary data against the backdrop of a downward revision to capital spending.
The July-September growth in real gross domestic product, the total value of goods and services produced at home, corresponded to a 0.3% gain from the previous quarter, posting the fourth straight quarter of increase, the Cabinet Office said.
The government said in the initial report, released Nov. 14, that the nation's economy expanded an annualized real 1.9% in the July-September period, following a revised 3.6% rise in the April-June period.
The latest figure suggested Japan's economy has been largely supported by public investment, not private sector growth, strengthening the view that the planned 3-percentage-point sales tax hike next April to 8% may weigh on consumer spending and investment, in turn dampening domestic demand. (The remaining text is not included in this sample.)
EUROPE / AFRICA / MIDDLE EAST - Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia's gross domestic product grew 3.19% in the third quarter of 2013 in current prices compared with a 2.7% rise in the previous three months, the Central Department of Statistics reported.
The GDP value rose from SR675.19 billion in the third quarter of 2012 to SR696.7 billion. During the same period the GDP rose by 3.05% in real prices, the department said.
In the public sector the GDP fell by 18.52% to SR102.6 billion in current prices, compared to the same period in 2012. However, in real prices it showed a growth of 2.43%.
The private sector, on the other hand, achieved a growth of 6.53% in current prices in the third quarter of 2013 to reach SR244.08 billion compared to the figure of previous year, SR229.13 billion.
The construction and building sector and downstream industries showed big growth at the rate of 9.76% and 7.87% respectively. In stable prices, the sector’s growth rose by 3.31%. (The remaining text is not included in this sample.)
A complete analysis of GDP and Monthly Updates for individual countries are included as part of Scrubber/Adsorber/Biofilter World Markets.
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rmcilvaine@mcilvainecompany.com
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