É«ÖÐÉ« announced today that November 2021’s volume of construction starts, excluding residential work, was $30.4 billion, an increase of +1.7% compared with October 2021’s level of $29.9 billion (originally reported as $28.8 billion).
Click here to read the complete November 2021 Industry Snapshot article, Ìý– below is a short excerpt.
Compared with November 2020, the latest month’s nonresidential starts were -8.0%. On a year-to-date basis, they were -1.6%. GRAND TOTAL starts in November 2021 (i.e., including residential activity) were +2.4% m/m, -3.5% y/y and +5.6% ytd.
November this year managed to avoid the usual modest decline in total starts due to seasonality, i.e., the arrival of colder weather heading into winter. Another feature of the latest month was that it was light in mega-sized projects. The only billion-dollar-plus project to break ground in November 2021 was Methanex Corp’s Geismar 3 methanol plant in Louisiana, south of Baton Rouge. Methanol is a member of the alcohol family; is a liquid; and has multiple important industrial uses. It’s not to be confused with methane which, as an emission of natural gas or animal waste, is largely viewed as an environmental villain.
Starts in November of last year included two mega projects adding to $4.0 billion, an office building in New York, at One Madison Avenue, and I-635 roadway work in Dallas, Texas.
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Some Convergence, Residential vs Nonresidential
The large discrepancies in É«ÖÐɫ’s starts statistics between the three major types of structure that were evident earlier this year,Ìý̶ with residential super strong; nonresidential buildings quite weak; and engineering/civil on an even keelÌý̶ are gradually diminishing.
Year to date, residential starts (+15.5%) are still up to a decent degree, but not by as much as previously; nonresidential building starts (-3.9%) remain down, but not as severely; and engineering starts (+2.1%) is doing a little better than flat.
On a month-to-month basis in November, residential starts were +3.1%, nonres building starts, +0.5%; and engineering, +3.7%.
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Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for É«ÖÐÉ«. 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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