MasTec

MasTec, Inc.
Public Company
Traded as NYSE: MTZ
Industry Heavy construction
Engineering
Project Management
Founded March 11, 1994
Headquarters Coral Gables, Florida, U.S.
Area served
North America
Key people
Jose Mas, CEO
Products Oil and natural gas pipelines, electricity generation, transmission and distribution, renewable energy, wireless and wireline communications, broadband
Revenue Decrease US$ 4.208 billion (2015)[1]
Decrease US$ -79.11 million (2015)
Total assets Decrease US$ 2.94 billion (2015)
Number of employees
20,100 (2016)[2]
Website www.mastec.com

Mastec, Inc. is an American multinational infrastructure engineering and construction company based in Coral Gables, Florida. Limited to the engineering, building, installation, maintenance and upgrade of energy, utility and communications infrastructure, including electrical utility transmission and distribution, power generation, natural gas and petroleum pipelines, wireless, wireline and satellite communications, wind farms, solar farms and other renewable energy, industrial infrastructure and water and sewer systems. Its customers are primarily in the utility, communications and government industries.[3] The company's core services are the engineering, building, installing, maintaining and upgrading of infrastructures.

The company was founded by Jorge Mas Canosa, father of current CEO Jose Mas, and it was listed on the NYSE in 1998. MasTec, Inc. is the second largest Hispanic-owned company in the United States, and has over 20,000 employees in North America.[4]

History

Early 1900s: Beginning as Burnup & Sims

The company was formed by the merger of two separate companies: Burnup & Sims and Church & Tower. Burnup & Sims was the oldest of the two founding companies and was founded in 1929 by two unemployed carpenters, Russell Burnup and Riley V. Sims, to provide design, construction, and maintenance services to the telephone and utilities industries. During the years of the Great Depression, the two established an office in West Palm Beach, Florida, and by 1936 had a small fleet of trucks and staff. The company’s first telecommunications projects were undertaken the following year at Cape Canaveral, where it was responsible for burying 85 miles of cable.[5]

B&S contributed to national defense during World War II by building airfields and telephone systems. After the war, the company became involved in the laying of underwater cable from Florida to Puerto Rico, and from there to Barbados, for such companies as AT&T and General Telephone. Projects then took on a greater geographical scope, as B&S established underground telecommunications systems and built radio towers in Costa Rica, Barbados, Trinidad-Tobago, and Venezuela.[6]

1960s: Church & Tower is formed

Originally founded in Cuba, Church & Tower incorporated in Miami, Florida in 1968 to construct and service telephone networks in Puerto Rico and Miami. When it overextended itself in Puerto Rico and could not build the telephone-infrastructure networks needed in Miami, the company’s owner asked his friend, Cuban immigrant Jorge Mas Canosa, to help save the business. In exchange for half ownership of CTF, Mas Canosa began to manage the company in 1969. Eager to improve the business, Mas Canosa climbed down into ditches, manholes, and trenches to observe workers’ construction methods. He listened to advice from telephone-company and government inspectors; he studied books about the most efficient and newest construction methods. As a result of these learning experiences, he transformed CTF into a fast-track, cost-effective construction program that won recognition for consistent professionalism and commitment to excellence. BellSouth Telecommunications, Inc. awarded Church & Tower a long-term contract for projects in the greater Miami and Fort Lauderdale areas. By 1971 Mas Canosa had turned the failing company around; he then borrowed $50,000 and bought the remaining shares of the firm.[6]

1990s: Founding of MasTec

On March 11, 1994, Church & Tower Group acquired 65 percent of the outstanding common stock of publicly traded Burnup & Sims, Inc. The name of Burnup & Sims was changed to MasTec, Inc., Jorge Mas Canosa became MasTec’s chairman and his son, Jorge Mas, was named president and chief executive officer. Mastec was now regarded as a “minority business enterprise,” publicly traded on NASDAQ under the symbol MASX.[7][8]

21st Century

In April 2007, Jose Mas became CEO of MasTec.[9] MasTec, Inc. earned total revenues of $3B in 2011[10] and, in addition to the MasTec brand, works under the following brand names: Wanzek, Power Partners, Precision Pipeline, Pumpco, nsoro, Advanced Technologies, ADVent, EC Source, Fabcor, Cam Communications, 3 PhaseLine, Optima Network Services and Globetec.[11]

Executives

Jorge Mas is the current Chairman of the Board for MasTec, and former CEO. He served as CEO from 1992-1997, and is the brother of current CEO, Jose Mas.
Jose Mas is the CEO of MasTec. He was appointed in 2007.[9]
Ray Harris is President of MasTec. He was appointed in January 1995; formerly, he was President and CEO of Mesa Power, which was formed by T. Boone Pickens, where he developed and financed wind and other renewable energy power projects.
Robert Apple has been COO since 2006. Formerly, he was Group President for MasTec's energy service operations.
C. Robert Campbell has been Executive Vice President and CFO since October 2004.
Alberto de Cardenas is Executive Vice President and General Counsel; he has been responsible for all of MasTec's corporate and operational legal matters and corporate secretary matters since 2005.[12]

Industries

Renewable Energy

In the renewable energy sector, MasTec is a contractor that constructs wind farms, solar energy facilities and power plants. Through their wholly owned subsidiary, Wanzek Construction, MasTec has built several wind farms, including Clipper Wind Farm in Jefferson, Minnesota; Taloga Wind Farm, in Putnam, Oklahoma; Crow Lake Wind Farm, in White Lake, South Dakota; Goat Mountain Wind Farm, in Robert Lee, Texas; and Laredo Ridge, in Boone County, Nebraska. Solar Energy projects include Douglas County Schools, in Denver, Colorado, where photo voltaic panels were installed onto 31 rooftops, and the Willows, California, Solar Project. MasTec also designed and built the Cornhusker Energy Power Plant, in Lexington, Nebraska.[13] MasTec Power Corp. is another wholly owned subsidiary providing renewable energy Engineering, procurement, and construction management (EPC) services for a variety of fuel types.

Electric Power

In the Electric Power Industry, MasTec is a contractor that builds and maintains high voltage electric power transmission systems, sub stations and switch yards, and distribution systems. Through their subsidiaries Wanzek Construction and MasTec Power Corp., MasTec is capable of providing design-build, EPC, and construction services for a variety of clients in the utility and private power producing markets.

Oil & Natural Gas

MasTec builds pipelines for the transportation of crude oil and natural gas. They also build pumping stations, compressor stations, and treatment facilities where oil and natural gas are conditioned before transporting to market.

Water/Sewer/Civil

In the water distribution and waste industry, MasTec builds water and waste water pipelines for municipalities throughout Florida and the Caribbean Islands.

Communications

MasTec's original line of business was in the communications industry, constructing transmission lines and digging trenches for companies such as Bell South in Florida. Now, MasTec is a major contractor for wireless networks and broadband, as well. They construct and maintain radio towers for mobile phone carriers, and do the trenching required to install fiber optic cable. Under its subsidiary MasTec Advanced Technologies, the company is also one of the largest providers of in-home installation of DirecTV in the United States and installing residential security systems for AT&T Digital Life.

Subsidiaries

Under the name MasTec, the company provides construction services to communications utilities, and oil and natural gas companies and utilities. It has several subsidiaries that provide infrastructure construction services, including:[14]

3 Phase Line: Construction and maintenance of electric transmission and distribution systems and facilities.
EC Source: Engineering and construction of major electric transmission and distribution systems.
Fabcor: Construction of oil and natural gas pipelines and facilities in Canada.
GlobeTec: Construction of water and waster water pipelines and treatment facilities, as well as civil construction for roadways and waterways.
nsoro MasTec: Engineering and construction of wireless networks and facilities.
MasTec Network Solutions, LLC: Engineering and construction of wireless networks and facilities.
MasTec Power Corp: Engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) of power generation facilities.
Power Partners: Engineering and construction of solar facilities and electric transmission systems.
Precision Pipeline: Engineering and construction of oil and natural gas pipelines and facilities.
Pumpco: Engineering and construction of oil and natural gas pipelines and facilities.
Wanzek Construction: Engineering and construction of wind farms and power generation facilities.

Project Examples

Craw-Kan Telephone Line

The Craw-Kan Telephone Line is in southeast Kansas. MasTec installed 962 miles of transmission line.[15]

North Valley Transmission Line

The North Valley Transmission Line is a 500/250 high voltage transmission line in Pinnacle Peak, Arizona. The services they provided included setting foundations, erecting steel poles, and installing conductor wire.[16]

Ruby Pipeline

The Ruby Pipeline is a 42-inch (1,100 mm) natural gas pipeline running from Opal, Wyoming, to Malin, Oregon. The route crosses Northern Utah, and Northern Nevada.[17] Ruby Pipeline, L.L.C. filed an application with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) on January 27, 2009, authorizing the construction and operation of the Ruby Pipeline Project. On April 5, 2010, the FERC approved the application. Construction began on July 31, 2010, and the pipeline was placed in service on July 28, 2011. The pipe is 680 miles (1,090 km) long and is expected to output 1.5 billion cubic feet per day (42×106 m3/d). MasTec, and its subsidiary Precision Pipeline, was awarded spreads 4 and 5 of the Ruby Pipeline Project, including the fabrication of mainline valves, launchers and receivers and associated foundations in the spring of 2010. An automatic welding process was used to install the 256 miles of 42" pipeline.[18]

Taloga Wind Farm

The Taloga Wind Farm was constructed in 2011 and is located near Putnam, Oklahoma. The project produces an estimated 324GW.h of power annually [19] and consists of 54 Mitsubishi MWT95 2.4MW turbines and over 20 miles of transmission line. During construction, MasTec employees volunteered their time and efforts to clean up a nearby lake. Thirty-seven MasTec employees walked the 63 mile shoreline surrounding Foss Lake and removed eight large dumpsters of trash.[20]

Willows Solar Power Facility

MasTec completed the Willows, California, solar power facility in May 2011. The 380kv system consists of 58 Dual Axis trackers with 24 PV Modules mounted to each tracker. The system will provide power to the city's waste water treatment plant.[21]

References

  1. "Summary Financials". MasTec. 2012. Retrieved 6 September 2012.
  2. "Yahoo Finance". Yahoo Finance. 2012. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  3. "Daily Finance". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  4. "Hispanic Business 500". Retrieved 6 September 2012.
  5. "Funding Universe". Retrieved 9 September 2012.
  6. 1 2 "Encyclopedia Online". Retrieved 9 September 2012.
  7. "Business Review". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  8. "American National Biography". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  9. 1 2 "Forbes Magazine". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  10. "Business Week". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  11. "SEC Filings for Year Ending December 31, 2011". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  12. "MasTec, Inc". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  13. "MasTec, Inc". Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  14. "MasTec, Inc". Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  15. "MasTec, Inc". Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  16. "MasTec, Inc". Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  17. "Ruby Pipeline". Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  18. "MasTec, Inc". Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  19. "The Wind Power Database". Retrieved 27 October 2012.
  20. "MasTec, Inc". Retrieved 27 October 2012.
  21. "MasTec, Inc". Retrieved 27 October 2012.
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