Process Equipment Cost Estimating: How to Get Within ±20% Without a Vendor Quote

Process Equipment Cost Estimating: How to Get Within ±20% Without a Vendor Quote

In December 2024, I watched a project manager present a budget to his board. He had a 15-slide deck, detailed cash flow projections, and a Gantt chart that fit on one page. The board approved $4.2 million.

Eight months later, the project was at $9.7 million and climbing. The board was not happy. The project manager was not employed.

The root cause wasn’t poor execution. It was poor estimating. Every piece of equipment had been estimated at 60–70% of its actual cost. Nobody checked the numbers against industry benchmarks. Nobody asked “does this number make sense?” Everyone just forwarded the spreadsheet.

This article is about how to estimate process equipment costs well enough to catch that kind of error — before the board meeting.

Why Cost Estimating Is an Engineering Skill, Not Just a Procurement Task

Procurement gets vendor quotes. That’s not estimating — that’s shopping. Estimating is what you do before RFQs go out, when you’re deciding between options, setting budgets, and checking if vendor quotes are reasonable.

An engineer who can estimate costs can:

  • Eliminate bad options before spending money on detailed design
  • Challenge vendor quotes that are out of line
  • Build credible budgets that management will approve
  • Avoid getting blamed when the project is 2× over budget because “the numbers came from the vendors”

The Six-Tenths Rule (and When It Lies)

The most famous cost estimating rule in chemical engineering: the six-tenths factor rule.

The rule: Cost₂ = Cost₁ × (Capacity₂ / Capacity₁)^0.6

If a 100 m³ tank costs $50,000, a 200 m³ tank costs approximately $50,000 × (200/100)^0.6 = $50,000 × 1.516 = $75,800. Not $100,000 (linear scaling).

Why 0.6? Because equipment cost is proportional to surface area (∝ D²) while capacity is proportional to volume (∝ D³). The exponent of 0.6 is approximately 2/3, which is the surface-to-volume scaling relationship. In practice, exponents range from 0.4 to 0.8 depending on equipment type.

When to use 0.6:

  • Preliminary (±30%) estimates
  • Same equipment type, same materials, similar pressure rating
  • Capacity ratio between 0.2 and 5 (outside this range, the exponent shifts)

Equipment-Specific Scaling Exponents

Using 0.6 for everything is wrong. Here are the exponents I use based on actual project data:

Equipment Type Exponent Basis Notes
Centrifugal pump 0.45 Flow rate Motor and VFD scale separately
Positive displacement pump 0.55 Flow rate Less economy of scale
Shell & tube HX 0.60 Heat transfer area Up to ~1000 m²; flattens above
Air-cooled HX 0.75 Heat transfer area Closer to linear (modular)
Pressure vessel (CS) 0.65 Volume or weight Pressure rating has major effect
Storage tank (API 650) 0.70 Volume Floor and roof don’t scale efficiently
Centrifugal compressor 0.40 Power Significant economy of scale
Reciprocating compressor 0.75 Power Modular — less scaling benefit
Cooling tower 0.80 Heat rejection Close to linear (fill volume scales nearly linearly)
Baghouse 0.65 Gas flow rate More modular at large sizes
RO system 0.85 Permeate flow Membrane area scales nearly linearly
Distillation column 0.55 Diameter × height Shell cost exponent lower; internals higher

Real example of scaling gone wrong:

A project estimated two 50 m³/min compressors using the six-tenths rule from a single 100 m³/min compressor quote. When vendor quotes came in, the two smaller compressors cost 40% more than they estimated. The 0.6 exponent wasn’t the problem — using it across different equipment configurations was. One large compressor has one motor, one control system, one foundation. Two small compressors need two of everything.

Installation Factor: The Number That Doubles Your Estimate

The equipment purchase price is about 30–50% of the total installed cost. The rest is installation: foundations, piping, electrical, instrumentation, structural steel, insulation, painting, and labor.

Lang Factors (Simplified)

Plant Type Installation Factor (Total/Purchased Equipment)
Fluid processing (pumps, tanks, HX, columns) 3.5 – 4.5
Solid-fluid processing (dryers, conveyors, baghouses) 3.0 – 3.8
Solid processing (crushers, screens, silos) 2.5 – 3.0
Battery manufacturing (mixers, coaters, formation) 2.8 – 3.5

Using Lang factors: Total Installed Cost = Equipment Purchase Cost × Lang Factor

For a fluid processing plant with $1M in equipment, total installed cost is roughly $3.5M–$4.5M.

More Detailed Installation Breakdown

For more accurate estimates, break down installation costs by equipment type:

Cost Element Pump System Pressure Vessel Heat Exchanger Compressor Package
Equipment purchase 100% 100% 100% 100%
Foundation / structural 8–12% 10–20% 5–10% 15–25%
Piping + valves 40–60% 25–40% 15–25% 20–35%
Electrical + I&C 15–25% 5–10% 8–12% 20–30%
Insulation + paint 3–5% 8–12% 5–8% 3–5%
Installation labor 20–30% 25–40% 20–30% 25–35%
Freight + rigging 3–5% 5–10% 3–5% 5–8%
Total Installation Factor 2.0 – 2.4 1.8 – 2.3 1.6 – 1.9 1.9 – 2.4

Note: These are on top of equipment purchase price. A pump that costs $10,000 will cost $20,000–$24,000 fully installed.

Location Multipliers: Where You Build Changes What You Pay

Installing the same pump costs different amounts in different places:

Location Relative Installed Cost
China (Tier 2 city, e.g., Changsha, Hefei) 0.85 – 1.0 (baseline)
China (Tier 1 city, e.g., Shanghai, Shenzhen) 1.05 – 1.15
Southeast Asia (Thailand, Vietnam) 0.90 – 1.05
India 0.75 – 0.90
Eastern Europe (Poland, Czech) 1.15 – 1.30
Western Europe (Germany, France) 1.40 – 1.70
USA (Gulf Coast) 1.30 – 1.50
USA (Northeast / California) 1.50 – 1.80

The reasons: Labor rates, labor productivity, local content requirements, logistics, permitting costs, and construction market conditions. A plant that costs $100M in Hefei might cost $160M in Germany and $180M in California.

Quick Check Methods: Catching Bad Numbers Fast

You don’t need detailed estimates for every decision. You need quick checks that catch the big errors.

Method 1: The $/Unit Check

Every type of equipment has a characteristic cost per unit of capacity. Memorize the ranges for equipment you work with regularly.

Equipment $/Unit Range (China, 2026)
Atmospheric storage tank (CS) $800–1,500/m³
Pressure vessel (CS, 10 bar) $3,000–6,000/ton
Centrifugal pump (CS, <50 kW) $200–500/kW
Shell & tube HX (CS/CS) $200–400/m²
Cooling tower $50–100/kW heat rejection
RO system (brackish water) $300–600/(m³/day)
Baghouse $15–30/(m³/h)
Centrifugal compressor $800–1,500/kW
Belt conveyor $400–800/m (including structure)
Agitator + drive $2,000–5,000/kW

Example quick check:

  • Proposal says $180,000 for a 500 m³ API 650 tank.
  • $/m³ = $180,000 / 500 = $360/m³
  • Range: $800–1,500/m³
  • Red flag. Either the tank is much smaller, or there’s something wrong with the number, or it’s a completely different type of tank (maybe bolted steel, not welded).

Method 2: The Capacity-Factor Cross-Check

When you get a vendor quote for one size but need to estimate another:

1. Look up the scaling exponent for that equipment type

2. Apply the six-tenths rule (with the correct exponent)

3. Cross-check against $/unit ranges

Method 3: The Total-Project Sanity Check

After you’ve estimated all equipment, add up total installed cost (equipment × installation factor × location factor) and divide by plant capacity.

Project Type Total Installed Cost Range ($/kWh or $/ton)
LIB gigafactory (greenfield) $45–65/kWh annual capacity
LIB cathode plant $25–40/kWh annual capacity
LIB cell assembly only $20–30/kWh annual capacity
Chemical plant (bulk) $500–1,500/annual ton capacity
Chemical plant (specialty) $2,000–5,000/annual ton capacity
Wastewater treatment (industrial) $1,500–3,000/(m³/day)
Wastewater treatment (municipal) $1,000–2,000/(m³/day)

If your estimate for a 10 GWh battery plant comes out to $800M ($80/kWh), that’s above the $45–65/kWh benchmark. Either your scope is bigger than “standard gigafactory,” your location has a significant premium, or your estimate has a systematic error.

When Vendor Quotes Are Misleading

Vendor quotes aren’t the truth. They’re a starting point for negotiation. Here’s what to watch for:

Budget vs firm pricing:

  • Budget quote: ±30–40% accuracy. Vendor spent 2 hours on it.
  • Budgetary quote: ±20–30%. Vendor spent half a day.
  • Firm proposal: ±10–15%. Vendor spent several days.
  • Fixed-price contract: ±5%. Vendor spent weeks. And it’s still not guaranteed.

What vendors don’t include in “base” pricing:

  • Export packing and crating (5–8% for international)
  • Freight and insurance (3–6% depending on distance and mode)
  • Site supervision during installation
  • Commissioning and startup support (typically 5–10% of equipment cost for complex systems)
  • Spare parts (first fill: 2–5%)
  • Special testing (FAT and SAT beyond standard: 2–4%)
  • Documentation in your language/format
  • Performance guarantees and bonds

Add 15–25% to base vendor quotes for these items.

The 3-quote rule: For equipment over $50,000, get at least three quotes. If all three are within 10% of each other, you’re probably priced correctly. If one is 40% lower than the other two, something is different — different scope, different quality, different assumptions. Find out what before you recommend the low bidder.

Putting It All Together: A Practical Estimating Workflow

For a ±30% estimate (concept/FEL-1):

1. Identify major equipment from block flow diagram

2. Size equipment approximately (rough sizing, not detailed)

3. Apply $/unit benchmarks or six-tenths rule from known references

4. Multiply by installation factor (use Lang factor for plant type)

5. Multiply by location factor

6. Add 30% contingency

For a ±15% estimate (FEL-2 / pre-FEED):

1. Develop preliminary P&IDs and equipment list

2. Get budget quotes from 1–2 vendors for major equipment

3. Apply equipment-specific installation factors (not generic Lang factor)

4. Estimate bulk materials (pipe, cable, steel) separately

5. Apply location factor

6. Add 15–20% contingency

For a ±10% estimate (FEL-3 / FEED):

1. Complete P&IDs, equipment datasheets, and general arrangements

2. Get firm quotes from 3+ vendors for all major equipment

3. Estimate installation by material take-off (not factors)

4. Get subcontractor quotes for major construction packages

5. Apply location factor

6. Add 10% contingency

A Final Sanity Check

Before any estimate leaves your desk, ask yourself:

1. $/unit check: Is each equipment cost within industry benchmarks per unit of capacity?

2. Total plant check: Is the total installed cost per unit of plant output reasonable?

3. Installation check: Is the ratio of total installed cost to equipment cost within typical Lang factors?

4. Comparison check: How does this compare to a similar recent project?

5. Optimism check: Am I assuming everything will go right? (Add contingency accordingly.)

The worst estimating error isn’t being wrong by 20%. It’s being precisely wrong — numbers with three decimal places built on assumptions that were never checked. Better to be approximately right than precisely wrong.

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