TAIPEI: Taiwanese companies across the petrochemical, textile and footwear industries are assessing whether they need to move some production to the U.S., as President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to impose a stiff tariff on imports.
Sandy Wang, a senior executive at Formosa Plastics Group, said Taiwan’s largest industrial company is evaluating whether it would be worthwhile to invest more in the world’s biggest economy.
“We have already created 6,000 job opportunities in the U.S., and we would consider investing more in the U.S. if the environment for investment is welcoming,” Wang said in response to a question from the Nikkei Asian Review at a press event Tuesday.
Sandy Wang, daughter of the Taiwanese conglomerate’s late founder Wang Yung-ching, described Trump as practical and intelligent.
Wang’s words came after her group said earlier this year that it would spend as much as $9.4 billion to build a new ethane cracker in the U.S. state of Louisiana, looking to maximizing the benefits of cheap shale gas. The project is pending approval by local environmental regulators. The plant will process ethane, a component of natural gas found in shale, and extract ethylene, used in the production of plastics.
The Taiwanese group has two similar facilities in Texas that produce 1.66 million tons of ethylene yearly. The company also is building a third manufacturing site in Texas that is set to yield 1.2 million tons of ethylene as of 2018.
Formosa Plastics Group holds a number of local stock market heavyweights under its umbrella, including Formosa Plastics, Formosa Petrochemical and Nanya Technology.