The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - NGLs: Ohio’s Plastics Industry’s Juicy Secret || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: April 9, 2024Since I'm here in Ohio, why not talk about what makes this region so unique. Today, we'll be discussing how shale in Ohio has propelled economic growth in an unfamiliar way. Full Newsletter: https:...//mailchi.mp/zeihan/ngls-ohios-plastics-industrys-juicy-secret
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Hey everybody, Peter Zion here coming to you from just outside historic Harmer Village,
just across the river from Marietta, Ohio, and that is the Ohio River behind me.
Today we're going to be talking about something that is an exception from the exception.
So the big exception is the American shale sector,
because it has a different economic structure and uses different technologies
from most oil production in the rest of the world.
And as a result, it has very low production costs and produce a lot of natural gas as a
byproduct of oil production. So when you're in Texas, most notably say the Permian, people are
after the crude oil and then natural gas comes up as a byproduct and they have to flare that natural
gas until the infrastructure can be built out to absorb it and bring it into, say, the chemical
sector. Here in Ohio and moving into Pittsburgh area in Pennsylvania, you've got a different problem.
The natural gas field is the Marcella and the Utica and they are dry gas fields where people are
after the natural gas rather than the liquids, because they're using it for fuel in every place
from Chicago to Boston to Washington, D.C. And so they need it for electricity. But there are still
liquids here, especially in the western parts of the play, which move into, say, Ohio. There you're
getting a fair percentage of something called natural gas liquids, which in layman's terms
means things like propane and butane. That means that in this part of the country, it's not
just that the natural gas is cheap because the production costs in the Marcellus are very low.
But so many NGLs come out of places like the Utica play, that Ohio has become a world leader in things like high-end plastics.
Because for them, it's not the oil that's the waste product.
It's the propane and such that is a primary feedstock into chemicals specifically for things like plastics.
And so we're seeing dozens of chemical facilities that do secondary processing, popping up in the more populated parts of Ohio, taking advantage of what is basically below global cost inputs of,
things like ethane, propane, butane, and the rest. So here we are in the middle of the continent
and we're suddenly seeing an explosion in industrial activity for something that we normally
associate with the Chinese coast, the Persian Gulf, or the Texas coast. Very different
situation, very different geology, very different outcomes.
