Singapore companies expanding into Texas face a practical engineering problem before construction even starts: the plant cannot simply be copied from a Jurong or Tuas design set and expected to work under US conditions. The main issues usually appear in codes and standards, electrical systems, permitting pathways, procurement conventions, and startup execution.
A Texas project may require different design assumptions for power supply, equipment certification, fire protection, pipe threads, inspection, and local authority submissions. These are not minor drafting changes. If they are addressed late, the result is usually redesign, procurement mismatch, delayed commissioning, or field modification.
Enterprise Singapore’s new Austin presence reflects growing commercial interest in Texas. The engineering work, however, still depends on disciplined project definition, correct code selection, and clear owner-side control from FEED through commissioning. L-Vision Engineering Pte Ltd supports these phases for process and industrial projects that need structured engineering input across Singapore and overseas execution. L-Vision Engineering has supported industrial plant engineering projects since 2001 across process manufacturing sectors.
Texas continues to attract manufacturers because it offers industrial land, established supply chains, access to energy and chemical corridors, and proximity to US customers. Depending on sector and location, companies may also find:
These advantages do not remove engineering complexity. They change it. A project team must still align process design, utility design, statutory submissions, procurement specifications, and construction sequencing to local requirements.
The main adjustment is not that the US uses a single federal engineering code. In practice, many US engineering requirements are based on national consensus standards such as ASME, API, NFPA, IEEE, and IEC/UL references, then adopted or enforced through state rules, local jurisdictions, insurers, client specifications, or authority requirements.
Singapore projects often reference SS, BS, IEC, ISO, Eurocodes, or combinations of international standards. In Texas, the design basis should identify exactly which codes apply by equipment class, discipline, jurisdiction, and owner requirement.
Pressure vessels and piping should not be treated as one code package.
For pressure vessels, the usual baseline is the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code Section VIII for design and fabrication, subject to the applicable division and service conditions. Where required by jurisdiction, client specification, or registration pathway, vessels may also need ASME U-stamping. This should be confirmed during FEED and vendor qualification, not after purchase order placement.
For process piping, the typical code is ASME B31.3 Process Piping. That covers a different scope from pressure vessel fabrication and should be specified separately in the design basis, material classes, and inspection requirements.
Typical early-stage checks include:
Storage tanks should be specified under the relevant API standards rather than grouped together with process piping.
Common references include:
Tank code selection affects shell design, roof type, nozzle arrangement, venting, foundations, and inspection scope. It should be fixed early because it drives both procurement and civil/structural interfaces.
Electrical differences are a frequent source of late project changes. A Singapore design basis built around 400V/50Hz cannot be transferred directly into a US facility commonly operating around 480V/60Hz for industrial loads, alongside local utility and protection requirements.
The design review should cover:
For building and site electrical systems, the applicable US adoption framework should be confirmed with local professionals and authorities early in the project.
Most startup failures on overseas projects are set up earlier, during scope definition and design basis development. FEED is where the owner confirms what the plant must do, which codes govern it, what utilities are available, and where local constraints will affect layout, equipment selection, and permitting.
For a Singapore company entering Texas, FEED should confirm:
Environmental approvals are project-specific. Some Texas projects require substantial submissions; others have a narrower scope depending on emissions, wastewater, storage, fuel use, and local jurisdiction. FEED should identify the likely permit path early, including whether TCEQ-related submissions are relevant.
A properly developed FEED Services package reduces the chance of late equipment changes, overloaded utility systems, and unresolved code conflicts during commissioning.
Once FEED is frozen, Detailed Engineering Design converts the approved basis into procurement, fabrication, installation, and testing documents. For overseas projects, that is where specification ambiguity becomes commercial risk.
Good DED should define:
For US procurement, the document set should also remove mismatch in:
OT cybersecurity should also be treated carefully. Its relevance depends on plant type, customer requirements, insurance expectations, integration scope, and whether the facility falls under any specific corporate or regulatory framework. In many projects, DED should define network architecture, panel segregation, remote access controls, backup philosophy, and cybersecurity responsibilities between owner, integrator, and vendor.
.png)
An EPCM structure can be useful when the owner wants tighter technical control across engineering, procurement, and site execution without handing the entire project to a single turnkey contractor. This model suits overseas expansion where owner standards, regional sourcing, and local contractors must be coordinated carefully.
Under an EPCM Services approach, the project team typically manages:
For this type of overseas project, our role is centered on engineering integrity, procurement coordination, and project management oversight from Singapore and the region. We do not act as the on-site construction supervisor in the US. Instead, the objective is to issue a design package that is construction-ready for local US contractors, then support execution remotely by clarifying drawings, reviewing technical deviations, and helping owners manage design-related decisions.
The same principle applies to approvals. We do not position ourselves as the local permit filer or as specialists in every municipal requirement. Our role is to prepare the FEED and DED documentation, such as mass and energy balances, P&IDs, equipment data, plot plans, and utility information, so that local US consultants or partners have the technical basis they need for permit applications and authority submissions.
Before freezing scope or issuing major purchase orders, project teams should verify the following:
| Item | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Applicable design codes by discipline | Confirm ASME, API, NFPA, and related electrical or structural references by equipment class and discipline |
| Voltage/frequency compatibility | Verify 480V/60Hz versus 400V/50Hz assumptions, motor compatibility, transformer philosophy, and protection settings |
| Metric vs imperial dimensions | Align dimensions, weights, nozzle sizes, and vendor document conventions across all packages |
| Thread standard compatibility | Check NPT versus BSP, flange classes, valve end connections, and maintenance spares compatibility |
| Tank and vessel certification requirements | Confirm API tank requirements and whether pressure vessels require ASME Section VIII compliance and U-Stamping |
| Local permit pathway technical basis | Prepare mass balances, energy balances, P&IDs, equipment data, and plot plans needed by local US permit consultants or partners |
| Fire protection basis | Define applicable NFPA references, firewater philosophy, detection, suppression, and hazardous area interfaces |
| Construction packaging strategy | Decide what will be modularized, shop-fabricated, site-installed, or sourced locally in the US |
| FAT/SAT requirements | Define factory acceptance testing, site acceptance testing, documentation, and punch list ownership before shipment |
| Commissioning responsibility matrix | Assign responsibility for pre-commissioning, loop checks, energization, startup support, and performance verification |
The most common issue is assuming an existing Singapore design can be reused with only minor drafting changes. In practice, codes, power supply, equipment certification, permitting requirements, and procurement conventions usually need a structured review.
Not always. Many of the engineering codes used in US industrial projects are national consensus standards, such as ASME, API, and NFPA documents. They are then adopted, referenced, or enforced through jurisdictions, insurers, owner specifications, or approval processes.
Not automatically in every case. Pressure vessels should be assessed against the applicable jurisdiction, service, client specification, and registration pathway. However, ASME Section VIII compliance is a common baseline, and U-stamping should be specified where mandated.
No. Storage tanks and process piping should be separated correctly in the design basis. Tanks commonly follow API standards such as API 650 or API 620, while process piping is typically designed to ASME B31.3.
No. Permit requirements depend on the type of process, emissions, wastewater generation, storage systems, site location, and local authority requirements. TCEQ involvement should be evaluated case by case during FEED. Our role is to develop the technical basis, including items such as mass balances, energy balances, P&IDs, and equipment data, which local US consultants or partners can then use to prepare permit submissions.
Its importance is increasing, but the exact scope depends on plant type, integration level, customer requirements, insurer expectations, and owner standards. It should be addressed deliberately in automation and electrical design rather than assumed late in the project.
For companies managing US expansion from Singapore, the main requirement is disciplined engineering control across FEED, DED, procurement, and construction planning. L-Vision Engineering Pte Ltd supports this by developing design packages, reviewing vendor compliance, coordinating multidisciplinary inputs, and helping owners manage technical interfaces between Asian and US execution parties.
Typical support can include:
We focus on major international and US industry standards such as ASME and API as the engineering basis. That does not replace local code review by US-based consultants or contractors, but it gives the project a consistent technical foundation that generally makes local approval and execution more straightforward.
The objective is straightforward: reduce avoidable redesign, procurement mismatch, and startup issues by resolving technical requirements early and documenting them clearly.
Texas can be commercially attractive, but the engineering work should be treated as a full code, utility, procurement, and execution transition rather than a geographic extension of an existing Singapore plant. Companies that define standards early, use FEED properly, and issue disciplined DED packages are generally in a stronger position to control cost and startup risk.
If your team is evaluating a Texas or wider US manufacturing project, L-Vision Engineering can help assess design code gaps, develop FEED packages, prepare detailed engineering deliverables, and coordinate technical execution with local partners.
Indonesia