Here's an interesting read from the Times-Picayune. Although it's about New Orleans, it has applicability here.
What's Houston got that N.O. doesn't? Plenty - Breaking News Updates New Orleans - Times-Picayune - NOLA.com
----- August 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 October 2006 What's Houston got that N.O. doesn't? Plenty
Posted by Pam Radtke Russell, Business writer August 04, 2007 10:27PM
Categories: Breaking News
As an accountant at KPMG in the 1970s and 1980s, Joe Bennett saw many of his clients, stalwart New Orleans oil companies, move to Houston.
"I sat there the whole time thinking, 'What the hell is so attractive about Houston?'¤" Bennett said.
But after relocating to the Texas city after Hurricane Katrina, Bennett, a senior vice president and chief of investor relations at Tidewater Inc., finally understands why the city he and other New Orleanians once considered a nuisance is such a draw for the energy industry.
"What I see is a much bigger town. There are public companies all over the place, a work force that is phenomenal, ... opportunities that are phenomenal," Bennett said. "The city is growing by leaps and bounds. When you drive around you say, 'My God, look at the businesses here.' "
Houston has 501 public companies and 915 public and private energy firms. The New Orleans region has just 11 public companies, and the local energy sector comprises 45 public and private firms, according to an analysis by the energy-focused investment firm Howard Weil. That mass of companies makes it difficult for an oil and gas company to do business anywhere but Houston.
"There's vibrancy and intellectual activity," said Dean Taylor, chairman, president and CEO of Tidewater, which operates the world's largest fleet of offshore supply vessels for oil and gas companies. "It's where ideas are being germinated and seminated. It's business-friendly. It's a city that works in every facet."
Taylor, Bennett and other senior management at Tidewater are weighing those positive attributes against the company's 51-year history in Louisiana. Earlier this summer, Taylor said some Tidewater executives, and the company headquarters, may move to Houston.
Tidewater would become the latest in a string of local energy firms to make such a move. Major and smaller energy companies alike, from Exxon Mobil to Newpark Resources, have relocated their entire operations to Houston over the past two decades. The number of people employed in oil and gas production statewide has gone from an all-time high of 94,722 in 1981 to 41,179 in 2005.
The departures only accelerated after Katrina, when many local energy companies temporarily set up shop in Houston and, like Bennett, saw firsthand the benefits of operating from that city. At the same time, Houston has become an aggressive economic recruiter, actively courting energy companies and tailoring incentive packages for them. Oil executives say the continuing exodus to Texas isn't a slight on New Orleans but more about the need to be in Houston.
"We make it about New Orleans, but it's not really about New Orleans. It's about Houston," said Jeff Parker, president of Howard Weil, which is based in New Orleans. "Houston is the Mecca of the oil business. It is strategically the most important city in the U.S., and probably around the world, as far as the energy business is concerned."
New Orleans, meanwhile, neglects its businesses, a situation that has worsened since the storm, executives say. That indifference, when combined with the city's high rate of crime, troubled schools and anemic health care system, makes it hard for some to stay.
"It's not just oil companies, it's all companies. They are all leaving New Orleans because of mergers and acquisitions," said Don Briggs, president of the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association. "They are leaving New Orleans because it's not safe. Quality of life is not like it used to be."
City and state leaders say they are reaching out and working to resolve the problems that plague New Orleans businesses.
"Gov. Blanco has done more for (the) oil and gas industry than any governor I've ever worked with," Briggs said.
The hard truth, though, said Mark Drennen, chief executive officer of the economic development group GNO Inc., is that the city has a long way to go. "In the short term, we're still not competitive," Drennen said.
Bookmarks