Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Pennsylvania
Related: About this forumShell looking to sell its Beaver County Cracker plant
Or they could also find a partner.
https://www.timesonline.com/story/news/local/2025/08/26/shell-investigating-selling-beaver-coonline-plant/85830561007/
The state gave Shell 1.65B in tax incentives to build the plant. Those incentives last 25 years. According to the article, the yearly tax break pays the salaries of every employee at the plant (approx 500).
The economic boom and thousands of new jobs that were supposed to follow in Shells wake have failed to materialize, according to research conducted by the Ohio River Valley Institute.
There was a lot of happy talk about how, once you build petrochemical facilities in Appalachia, then all these other businesses will relocate next to them, which is not a thing that happens and hasnt happened, said Eric de Place, an energy policy consultant who has researched Shell Monaca for ORVI. De Places analysis found that Beaver Countys population has declined since 2012, and it has not seen growth in jobs, GDP or businesses.
Theres simply no way to look at economic performance and say, Beaver County got this petrochemical plant and it flourished. In fact, it is declining relative to the U.S. and Pennsylvania, and it has not outperformed the counties around it, he said. I think you look at the scoreboard and you say, this was a terrible investment of taxpayer money.
There was a lot of happy talk about how, once you build petrochemical facilities in Appalachia, then all these other businesses will relocate next to them, which is not a thing that happens and hasnt happened, said Eric de Place, an energy policy consultant who has researched Shell Monaca for ORVI. De Places analysis found that Beaver Countys population has declined since 2012, and it has not seen growth in jobs, GDP or businesses.
Theres simply no way to look at economic performance and say, Beaver County got this petrochemical plant and it flourished. In fact, it is declining relative to the U.S. and Pennsylvania, and it has not outperformed the counties around it, he said. I think you look at the scoreboard and you say, this was a terrible investment of taxpayer money.
Thank you Gov Corbett!
5 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies

Shell looking to sell its Beaver County Cracker plant (Original Post)
Deminpenn
Aug 26
OP
jmbar2
(7,261 posts)1. sell it to CrackerBarrel?
Turbineguy
(39,292 posts)2. They'd better be careful
if they decide to change the plant entrance sign.
Bluestocking
(265 posts)3. Do they manufacture white people at this plant
twodogsbarking
(15,421 posts)4. Anyone have a spare dollar? The scrap should pay you back.
Deminpenn
(16,961 posts)5. FTR, this is a petrochemical plant
It produces feed stock for the plastics industry using natural gas fracked from the local Marcellus Shale. The process "cracks" ethane, thus Cracker Plant for shorthand.