Producer
RegO (Engineered Controls Intl)
LP/cryogenic gas valves, regulators and fittings.
2
Inputs supplied
2
Goods downstream
0
Facilities
0
Stories
What they make
2 inputs RegO (Engineered Controls Intl) supplies
Click an input to see every good that depends on it, every country that produces it, and every other company in the supply chain.
Where it shows up
Goods downstream
Essential goods that depend on something RegO (Engineered Controls Intl) makes — pick one to see the full supply chain.
What else they do
Business segments
The company's full revenue map — where this supply-chain role fits within their broader business.
LP-Gas Equipment
Cryogenic Equipment
Industrial Gas
Intelligence
What's known
Sourced claims about this company's role in supply chains — chokepoints, concentration, incidents, dual-use connections.
Did you know2024
RegO makes the regulator on a propane grill — and the cryogenic valves that keep hospitals supplied with oxygen. Beyond LP-gas, RegO (Engineered Controls International) is a major maker of the valves and regulators for cryogenic liquids: liquid oxygen, nitrogen, argon, LNG and, increasingly, liquid hydrogen. That puts it squarely behind bulk medical-oxygen systems — the large liquid-oxygen tanks outside hospitals that, vaporized, feed the oxygen supply for patients. During COVID-19, when hospital oxygen demand spiked and bulk-LOX logistics became a global bottleneck, the valves and regulators on those tanks were a quiet link in the chain. So the same company behind a backyard grill's regulator also helps keep a patient breathing, fuels LNG terminals, and is positioning for the hydrogen economy — its competency being not any one gas, but the safe containment of pressurized and ultra-cold fluids across applications that could not look more different.
RegO / Engineered Controls International ↗Concentration2024
RegO completes the picture of a quietly concentrated pressurized-and-cryogenic gas-equipment sector. Together with Cavagna (LPG) and Marshall Excelsior (LPG and anhydrous ammonia), RegO is part of a small group of code-bound specialists that make the valves, regulators and fittings on which hazardous-gas systems rely — but RegO's cryogenic strength extends that dependence into medical oxygen, the industrial-gas (oxygen/nitrogen/argon) supply chain, LNG and liquid hydrogen. Because cryogenic valve design is exacting and safety-certified, the field has high barriers and few qualified makers, so a disruption among them would touch home heating, hospital oxygen, industrial gases and emerging hydrogen infrastructure at once. It's the same pattern seen across this radar: an unglamorous, safety-critical component whose global supply rests on a handful of firms most people will never hear named.
RegO / Engineered Controls International ↗