Grant County ports gearing up for growth

Oct. 19—MOSES LAKE — Grant County ports are gearing up for increased business and industry across the region with no shortage of industrial land to develop but with a focus primarily on expanding rail access, utilities and other infrastructure to support development.

"There's a core excitement in this region for growth," Port of Ephrata Executive Director David Lanman said. "I think it's just a matter of getting everybody together going in the same direction. There's a significant opportunity in this area."

Port of Moses Lake Director of Business Development Richard Hanover explained some of the factors the port looks at for expansion and drawing in new business.

"You have to look at what are some of your strengths, and for us land is cheap, it's fairly affordable over here. There's lots of land," Hanover said. "The other thing is power. Low-cost power is essential for recruiting a lot of these industries. Water is another important asset. And then there's just key functions that you need to have in place like an industrial wastewater system."

Hanover said Moses Lake is considered one of the larger ports in the county and is seeing a lot of new industries move into the region simultaneously, alongside the major players already in the port district.

"You get REC (Silicon) back up and going," Hanover said. "I recruited in Twelve, which is a sustainable aviation fuel company. Group14's here, Sila Nanotechnologies is here, OneD's getting up and going ... and Stoke Space Technologies is continuing to expand and grow."

The port owns the Grant County International Airport, a significant factor in bringing in aviation business.

"Boeing is now the largest employer in Grant County," Hanover said. "By the end of the year, they'll be close to about a thousand employees. And then we have the AeroTEC Flight Test (Center), Greenpoint Technologies, Genie Industries, Moses Lake Industries, Chemi-Con, Joyson, and then all the other industries that we have and they're all expanding and growing. So we're in a really good location, I think, for diversity within our industry."

Hanover said there are challenges such as solidifying infrastructure for the port district and the city of Moses Lake, but that isn't stopping growth in Grant County from being a great economic opportunity for the port.

"We can pick and choose what we want and what's best for our community," Hanover said. "We don't have to necessarily always go after those big opportunities. Now, we're actually looking at potentially creating an industrial incubator space for startup companies and being able to grow our own. We don't know when that future is going to happen."