Bentley Infrastructure 500

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Bentley Infrastructure 500 [1] is a worldwide ranking of infrastructure owners around the world compiled by the CAD software company Bentley Systems. It was first published in 2010. The index ranks the combined infrastructure assets in the hands of the biggest public and private organisations in the world.

In contrary to the Forbes Global 2000 ranking, the Bentley Infrastructure 500 ranks companies according to their reported tangible fixed assets (or other comparable noncurrent physical assets such as buildings or fixed structures, land, and machinery) - and is a direct measure of the infrastructure owned and operated by an organization. The aim of the ranking is to help global constituents appreciate and explore the magnitude of investment in infrastructure and the potential to continually increase the return on that investment. The Infrastructure 500 index also takes into consideration governments and states.

2014 list

Rank Organization Headquarters Country Infrastructure Value (millions USD)
1 Federal government of the United States  United States 360,900
2 GAZPROM  Russia 248,401
3 ExxonMobil  United States 243,650
4 Petrobras  Brazil 227,433
5 Royal Dutch Shell  Netherlands 191,897
6 China National Petroleum Corporation  China 190,424
7 Highways Agency  United Kingdom 185,875
8 Électricité de France - EDF  France 172,839
9 Chevron  United States 164,829
10 Rosneft  Russia 162,852
11 BP  United Kingdom 133,690
12 Pemex - Petróleos Mexicanos  Mexico 130,837
12 PDVSA - Petróleos De Venezuela  Venezuela 128,535
14 Korea Electric Power Corporation  Korea 122,133
15 Commonwealth of Australia  Australia 119,327
16 State of California  United States 118,627
17 Walmart  United States 117,907
18 Kingdom of the Netherlands  Netherlands 114,597
19 Enel  Italy 111,776
20 AT&T  United States 110,968

*As measured by reported net tangible fixed assets.[2]

2013 list

Rank Organization Headquarters Country Infrastructure Value (millions USD)*
1 Federal government of the United States  United States 342,900
2 State Grid Corporation of China  China 236,012
3 GAZPROM  Russia 228,366
4 ExxonMobil  United States 226,949
5 Petrobras  Brazil 204,962
6 Royal Dutch Shell  Netherlands 172,293
7 Highways Agency  United Kingdom 166,985
8 Électricité de France - EDF  France 161,286
9 Chevron Corporation  United States 141,348
10 Petroleos Mexicanos  Mexico 127,449
11 Kingdom of the Netherlands  Netherlands 118,205
12 Walmart  United States 116,681
13 BP  United Kingdom 115,421
14 Korea Electric Power Corporation  Korea 113,498
15 GDF Suez  France 113,416
16 Commonwealth of Australia  Australia 113,386
17 State of California  United States 112,470
18 AT&T  United States 109,767
19 Enel  Italy 109,662
20 Tokyo Electric Power Company  Japan 106,365

*As measured by reported net tangible fixed assets.[3]

2011 list

Rank Organization Headquarters Country Infrastructure Value (millions USD)
1 Federal government of the United States  United States 308,800
2 State Grid Corporation of China  China 209,727
3 ExxonMobil  United States 199,548
4 GAZPROM  Russia 180,019
5 Petrobras  Brazil 167,777
6 Électricité de France - EDF  France 143,241
7 Nippon Telegraph and Telephone  Japan 119,098
8 Kingdom of the Netherlands  Netherlands 117,060
9 Royal Dutch Shell  Netherlands 117,060
10 Walmart  United States 107,878
11 Tokyo Electric Power Company  Japan 106,455
12 BP  United Kingdom 105,887
13 Chevron Corporation  United States 104,504
14 Enel  Italy 104,349
15 GDF Suez  France 104,317
16 State of California  United States 104,107
17 Ferrovie dello Stato  Italy 103,903
18 AT&T  United States 103,196
19 State of Texas  United States 92,214
20 ENI  Italy 90,065

2010 list

Rank Organization Headquarters Country Infrastructure Value (millions USD)
1 Steady Federal government of the United States  United States 282,700
2 Steady Électricité de France - EDF  France 186,466
3 Steady GAZPROM  Russia 161,813
4 Steady Petrochina Company Limited  China 155,973
5 Steady ExxonMobil  United States 139,116
6 Steady Petrobras  Brazil 132,286
7 Steady Royal Dutch Shell  Netherlands 129,149
8 Steady United States Department of the Army  United States 122,145
9 Steady Enel  Italy 113,951
10 Steady Nippon Telegraph and Telephone  Japan 107,856
11 Steady Tokyo Electric Power Company  Japan 106,455
12 Steady BP  United Kingdom 103,686
13 Steady Walmart  United States 102,307
14 Steady State of California  United States 102,201
15 Steady Ferrovie dello Stato  Italy 101,660
16 Steady AT&T  United States 100,093
17 Steady GDF Suez  France 99,457
18 Steady Chevron Corporation  United States 96,468
19 Steady China Petrochemical Corporation  China 96,105
20 Steady Verizon Communications  United States 91,466

Infrastructure Value above as measured by reported net tangible fixed assets.

Key findings

The Bentley Infrastructure 500 index shows little correlation with the Forbes 2000 - showing that the biggest companies in the world are not necessarily the biggest owners of fixed assets.

The 2010 study showed that the combines assets of all the 500 companies add up to US$ 13 trillion, which is equivalent to annual GDP of the United States. Other interesting relations compiled by CAD Analyst[4]

  • the largest commercial facilities owner is No. 13, Wal-Mart Stores, at $102.3 billion (Forbes 2000 No. 14);
  • the largest state government infrastructure owner is No. 14, Government of California, at $102.2 billion (Public Entity - not in Forbes);
  • the largest rail owner is No. 15, Ferrovie dello Stato, at $101.6 billion (Public Entity - not in Forbes);
  • the largest manufacturing owner is No. 31, Toyota, at $71.9 billion (Forbes 2000 No. 360);
  • the largest mineral resources owner is No. 36, Brazilian Vale do Rio Doce, at $66.1 billion (Forbes 2000 No. 80);
  • the largest infrastructure owner in India is No. 81, Reliance Industries, at $38.1 billion (Forbes 2000 No. 126);
  • the largest private infrastructure investor is No. 89, Ferrovial, at $35.9 billion (Forbes 2000 No. 748);
  • the largest bank owner is No. 128, Royal Bank of Scotland Group, at $25.3 billion (Forbes 2000 No. 385);
  • the largest private water infrastructure owner is No. 322, Kemble Water Holdings, at $14.3 billion (did not make the Forbes 2000).

See also

References

External links