Caterpillar Chooses Georgia For New Factory Over Arkansas, Others

by Roby Brock ([email protected]) 147 views 

Caterpillar has selected a location near Athens, Georgia for a new $200 million hydraulic excavator manufacturing facility.

Arkansas economic officials had been working to land the plant in state, possibly in Fort Smith.

Today, Caterpillar officials said the state-of-the-art, one-million-square-foot-facility is expected to directly employ 1,400 people once it is fully operational. The company will make mini hydraulic excavators and small track-type tractors.

Caterpillar estimated another 2,800 full-time jobs will be created in the U.S. among suppliers and at other non-Caterpillar companies that will support the new facility.

“We are making a series of significant investments around the world to position Caterpillar to maintain its leadership position, and I am thrilled to be in Georgia today to announce that Athens will be the newest city to be home to a Caterpillar production facility. We are even more excited that this project will create more than 4,200 jobs in the United States,” said Caterpillar Chairman and CEO Doug Oberhelman.

Gov. Mike Beebe (D) said in a Talk Business interview last week that the Caterpillar operation “absolutely” had a chance to locate in Fort Smith or another part of Arkansas.

Earlier this month, he had also been on financial news channel CNBC pitching Arkansas’ assets for the new Caterpillar plant while on location at Caterpillar’s new North Little Rock motor grader factory. Fort Smith, which has a deeply-rooted manufacturing base and pending layoffs at a Whirlpool refrigerator factory, was considered a prime location for the new Caterpillar plant.

“Arkansas is open for business, especially manufacturing,” Beebe said in the CNBC interview. He touted the state’s central U.S. location, transportation and distribution infrastructure, and economic incentives.

However, Beebe said “quality of workforce” could be the biggest factor to influence Caterpillar’s decision. He hoped the 600 employees working in North Little Rock would be testimony for that advantage.

According to press reports out of Georgia, it also appears that proximity to the Port of Savannah, one of the largest eastern seaboard ports, played a critical role in locating the factory in Athens.