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EDITOR’S NOTE: The project records
appearing every week in the Site Selection Project Bulletin are
pulled from the Conway Projects Database, a proprietary resource with tens of
thousands of records of corporate end-user facility investments across all industry
sectors and all world geographies. Want to look for our projects yourself? Look
here.
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This Riverbank, California, site
will soon house the Aemetis Carbon Zero 1 Plant.
Photo courtesy of
Aemetis
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Last week, the California city of Riverbank, located in Stanislaus County on the outskirts
of Modesto, gained a long-awaited boost to its green economy, according to Riverbank Mayor
Richard O’Brien. Within the next few years California-based renewable natural gas and
renewable fuels company Aemetis will build out a $500 million, 125-acre facility at
Riverbank Industrial Complex. “Aemetis continues to complete major milestones in our
Five-Year Plan,” said Aemetis Chairman and CEO Eric McAfee. “This approval for the
Riverbank sustainable aviation fuel and renewable diesel plant is the result of years of
engineering and environmental work with the city and several government agencies, allowing
us to finalize additional key permits in the next few months.” The new site will produce
90 million gallons of sustainable aviation fuel and renewable diesel per year at the
former U.S. Army ammunition manufacturing facility. Renewables produced at this site will
service airlines and a national chain of travel shops under supply contracts, per the
company’s release. When construction begins 800 constructions jobs will be created,
followed by 650 new direct and indirect jobs.
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If approved by Ireland’s Industrial Development
Authority, Astellas will begin construction at the 44-acre site in
2024.
Rendering courtesy of Astellas
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Pharmaceutical company Astellas Pharma Inc. announced plans to bring a $352 million
manufacturing plant to County Kerry in Ireland’s Munster province. The company has
submitted an application to take on a little over 44 acres of Kerry Technology Park in the
town of Tralee to construct a three-story, 78,000-sq.-ft. facility. This site in
southwestern Ireland will allow for Astellas to expand its capacity for aseptic drug
products while increasing production and development of antibody drugs and new products.
“Astellas is developing innovative drugs and technologies based on our Focus Area research
and development approach, placing patients at the forefront of everything we do. With the
new facility, Astellas will aim to strengthen our in-house production capacity and
capabilities and ensure a stable supply of high-quality Astellas medicines to patients
around the world,” said Astellas Chief Manufacturing Officer Hideki Shima. Upon approval
of the company’s planning application, Astellas aims to begin construction in 2024 with
operations anticipated to begin in 2028.
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A photo-rendering shows the placement of the planned
new electric arc furnace (EAF) at Voestalpine’s site in Donawitz. The same
technology is coming to the company’s site in Linz.
Rendering courtesy of Voestalpine
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Austria-based Voestalpine Group’s Greentec Steel initiative aims to bring $1.6 billion of
electric arc furnace (EAF) technology into its steel mills in Donawitz, located north of
Graz in south-central Austria, and Linz, located in the north. In 2024 construction will
begin on the $480 million project at the company’s 800,000-sq.-ft.-plus Donawitz site.
“Today, we launch the next generation of steel production,” said Voestalpine CEO Herbert
Eibensteiner at the September 13 groundbreaking ceremony there. “The partial conversion to
electric arc technology at our two sites in Linz and Donawitz alone allows us to reduce
local CO2 emissions by around 5% from 2027. That makes Greentec Steel Austria’s largest
climate protection program.” Incorporation of this technology will allow the company to
reduce emissions by 30%, which equates to 4 million tons of carbon dioxide. The Donawitz
mill will be designed to produce 850,000 tons of steel annually, following production
start in 2027. A study from the Industrial Science Institute (IWI) study says the two
investments will generate €767 million in value and secure around 9,000 jobs during the
construction phase alone.
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Reports compiled and written by Alexis Elmore
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