Â鶹´«Ã½¸ßÇåConnect announced today that September 2021’s volume of construction starts, excluding residential work, was $38.0 billion, an increase of +12.7% compared with August 2021’s level of $33.7 billion (originally reported as $33.0 billion).
Click here to read the complete September 2021 Industry Snapshot article, Ìý– below is a short excerpt.
Compared with September 2020, the latest month’s nonresidential starts were +31.1%. On a year-to-date basis, they were -2.3%. GRAND TOTAL starts in September 2021 (i.e., including residential activity) were +7.4% m/m, +19.6% y/y, and +7.3% ytd.Ìý Ìý
The latest month’s starts statistics feature three mega-sized projects of a billion dollars or more each, adding to $10.3 billion. At $1.3 billion and $1.0 billion are a plastics plant in Louisiana and a university medical complex in California (²õ±ð±ðÌý). But those two projects, big as they are, take back seats to the estimated $8.0 billion undertaking being launched by computer chipmaker Intel Corporation in Maricopa County (Phoenix), Arizona. The company has announced capital spending of $20 billion on two plants, but major portions of the bill will be directed towards equipment. Especially important in high-tech chip plants are ultra-‘clean’ rooms to avoid micro-fiber and other forms of contamination in the production process.
The most prominent mega project in last year’s September starts statistics was the Tesla Cybertruck Gigafactory in Austin, Texas, for $1.1 billion.
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Up, Down, and Sideways
Â鶹´«Ã½¸ßÇåConnect’s ‘starts’ statistics through the first three quarters of 2021 hiked along markedly different routes. Versus results for Jan-Sept 2020, residential starts pulled ahead by a fifth, +21.1%; heavy engineering/civil was little better than flat, +1.7%; and nonresidential building stumbled, -4.9%. ÌýÌý
On a month-to-month basis in September, however, it was nonresidential building that took the lead, +31.0%. Residential was in a holding pattern, +1.3%; and heavy engineering/civil fell behind, -14.4%.
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Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for Â鶹´«Ã½¸ßÇåConnect. He has delivered presentations throughout North America on the U.S., Canadian and world construction outlooks. Mr. Carrick has been with the company since 1985. Links to his numerous articles are featured on Twitter , which has 50,000 followers.
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