Have Microbes, Will Travel: Small Sun Belt Company
Finds Niche in Cleaning Up After Others
by Doug Barry,
U.S. Commercial Service
Dan Kelley is CEO of Tierra Dynamic Company, a Phoenix-based environmental
firm specializing in removing toxins from soil and water. He and his
30 employees set their sights on emerging markets a few years ago
and with the help of the U.S. Commercial Service and some very special
bugs have seen their international business go from nothing to 25
percent of annual revenues.
Kelley said the move into international markets was a matter of common
sense. The environmental industry is new to many developing
countries and we can compete better over there than we can in more
developed countries, he said. Kelley explains that competitors
with similar technologies tend to be bigger firms for whom a $300,000
contract isnt worth the effort. Theres a big void
in the market and were happy to fill it.
What about the bugs?
Tierra Dynamic negotiated the rights to the patent for a technology
called bio sparge. Simply put, Kelleys firm cultivates bacteria
that occurs naturally and a special process induces them to eat spilled
hydrocarbons and other bad stuff at an accelerated rate. These are
no anorexic bugs. We increased their appetite, he says.
And what an appetite. According to Kelley, this technique remediates
soil three times faster than other methods now on the market, a significant
advantage when youre concerned about carcinogens that can cause
cancers and other health problems. Tierra Dynamic has negotiated the
rights to another patented technology that destroys PCBs
a particularly lethal source of carcinogens. When you see whole
families, including very young children living near this stuff, youre
glad you can help protect their health.
Follow the Regulations
Kelleys current focus is on South America, especially Brazil
and Argentina, but there have also been forays into Indonesia, Malaysia
and Singapore. Tierra Dynamic often starts the market analysis process
by looking at the environmental regulation enforcement priorities
of a specific country. Brazil wants to clean oil storage tanks
and weve submitted proposals worth $7 million over the next
couple of years, said Kelley. The next step is finding a local
partner who lacks the technology but has local business and political
connections needed to get contracts.
The quest for suitable partners has been greatly advanced with the
help of the U.S. Commercial Service. Kelley has worked with the Commercial
Service for more than 5 years and has participated in environmental
Matchmaker Programs to Southeast Asia, Malta and, mostly recently,
to Uruguay, Argentina and Brazil. The Matchmaker Program introduces
U.S. companies to pre-screened business partners agents, distributors,
joint-venture partners. Delegations are industry specific and typically
visit two to three overseas markets, staying two days in each country.
At each stop members receive country market briefings, an itinerary
of appointments screened to each company's needs, in country promotion
and hospitality events. The first companies the Commercial Service
arranged for us to meet in Argentina and Brazil were the partners
we ended up with, Kelley said.
In Argentina, Tierra Dynamic created a joint venture company called
Mileto-Innovative Remediation Technologies. The Argentine partner
is Dr. Oscar Cuper of the well-established firm Hidraulica Mileta.
Water and wastewater treatment is their core business,
said Kelly, but with their reputation and contacts, we will
be able to introduce to the market a new line of innovative remediation
technologies.
But now that Argentina is in the midst of a full-blown economic crisis
and Brazil has devalued its currency, whats a small company
in Phoenix to do? The downside of working in emerging markets is that
they are emerging and therefore prone to occasional upheaval. The
company is pursuing less risky opportunities through the Inter-American
Development Bank and Kelley has shifted focus to the energy sector,
which he believes has the best prospects for weathering the current
storm. Others are pulling out, he said, but were
in for the
long haul.
He says that despite all the bad economic news Tierra Dynamic has
recently received two new requests for proposals from the Argentine
energy sector. He predicts more will follow because despite the recession
and other economic problems, Argentinas national electricity
demand continues to increase. As demand increases, so will the need
to fund remediation of PCB contaminated electric transformers located
throughout the
country. Recently passed laws require that all PCB contaminated oil
be cleaned up by 2010. The value of these remediation projects could
exceed $20 million.
When in Rome
Kelleys general advice to other U.S. businesses contemplating
entering international markets can be boiled down to the following:
Find a good partner. Your partner will go through the
rigmarole of helping find clients and this will greatly accelerate
market entry.
Call on the U.S. Commercial Service to help you find the right
partner. Our success in penetrating two of the largest markets
in South America is a direct result of the substantial help and assistance
provided by the Commercial Service.
When in Rome, do as the Romans. We Americans like to
cut to the chase in business. Other cultures like to orate more than
we do and only eventually get around to what they want.
Be patient. Americans think in quarters. If nothing happens
in 3 months, Im out of here. You need to invest
some money and time developing new markets.
What Kelley says he found in his travels is that Made in the
USA means everything. It means the best. But there is more motivating
Tierra Dynamics than pride of place and any competitive advantage
associated with it. This is an idealistic business. At the end
of the day, I want to say I got this paycheck for doing something
good for somebody else.
quote
This is an idealistic business. At the end of the day, I want
to say I got this paycheck for doing something good for somebody else.
Dan Kelley, CEO of Tierra Dynamic Company
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| Clean-Up Guys: Dan Kelley of Tierra Dynamics and
Dr. Oscar Cuper of joint-venture partner Hidraulica Mileto in
front of their hazardous wastewater treatment facility in the
Province of Buenos Aires. |