“We will continue our Hefei project, which includes 12 big buildings. I believe, as a clean and stable energy, solar must be promising in the future. I don’t think the behavior of the EU and the U.S. is proper.”-Kenneth Yu, 3M China operations
31 October 2012, U.S. based 3M expects its U.S. sales to fall for the next five to ten years, and they expect China to become their number one market.
In their latest quarterly report, 3M showed a big jump in revenues from Canada and Latin America, up 10.5%. The United States had increased sales of 2.3%. Sales in Europe, Africa, Middle East and Asia were flat. However, 3M officials think that over the next decade their sales will boom in China.
They say they will streamline their operations, with their consumer and office supplies division looking like it will be drastically cut due to flat profits. 3M will continue investing in future markets.
3M has already invested $1.2 billion USD in China since 1984. For the next five years the corporation, formerly known as the Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company, is investing $120 million in the solar power industry in China.
3M officials say global demand for solar power products are booming, and China is likely to become the center of the global solar power industry.
As an example of government incompetence, President Barack Obama, with support from the Republican controlled Congress, enacted outrageous tariffs on solar products from China. It was the death blow to struggling Hoku Materials in Pocatello, Idaho.
The newly built polysilicon factory, in southeast Idaho, had locals hopeful that hundreds of desperately needed good paying jobs would be available. Hoku’s contracts were with Chinese solar product companies that were directly affected by the tariffs.
Now it looks like U.S. based 3M is jumping ship for better shores in China.