NEWS RELEASE NOVEMBER 2012
Oil and Gas Industry Valve Purchases to Exceed $9 Billion Next Year
Sales of valves to the oil and gas industry are expected to be $9.2 billion next year according to the latest McIlvaine forecasts in Industrial Valves: World Markets.
($ Millions)
World Region |
2013 |
Africa |
1,517 |
CIS |
965 |
East Asia |
716 |
Eastern Europe |
27 |
Middle East |
2,503 |
NAFTA |
1,749 |
South & Central America |
972 |
West Asia |
168 |
Western Europe |
628 |
Total |
9,245 |
The Middle East will generate the most revenue, but NAFTA is closing the gap. Large numbers of valves are required in hydraulic fracturing. In the U.S., there is a very large investment in extraction of liquids from the so-called wet shale in the west and gas from dry shale areas in Texas and Pennsylvania.
The market is also expanding due to the expenditures to liquefy natural gas. In the U.S., terminals which were built to import and gasify LNG are now being converted over to liquefy the U.S. shale gas and export it.
New regulations on fugitive emissions also impact the valve market. Systems to capture gas now released during well completion incorporate a number of valves. The reclamation and reuse of wastewater is also an expanding application for valves.
Sub-sea applications challenge valve suppliers with requirements for high pressure and performance. The corrosive nature of flow-back fluids in hydraulic fracturing, present a challenge in materials selection.
The transport of gas liquids which are a byproduct of the shale gas extraction provide still another valve application. There are also plans to invest more than $20 billion in gas-to-liquid plants. These plants will take advantage of the disparity between natural gas and oil prices. These plants will each require thousands of valves.
For more information on Industrial Valves: World Markets, click on: http://www.mcilvainecompany.com/brochures/water.html#n028