Latin America’s industrial gases landscape is closely tied to mining, metals, steelmaking, refining, chemicals, healthcare, food processing, and energy-transition activity. Oxygen, nitrogen, argon, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, helium, and specialty gases support essential industrial processes across extraction, smelting, welding, inerting, purification, cooling, packaging, and medical care. As regional economies modernize industrial capacity, reliable gas supply is becoming increasingly important.
According to MarkNtel Advisors, the Latin America Industrial Gases Market was valued at around USD 8.75 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD 11.88 billion by 2032, growing at nearly 4.47% CAGR during 2026–2032. The USD 11.88 billion by 2032 outlook reflects expanding demand from mining, steelmaking, metals, energy-transition projects, healthcare, automotive, and packaged food applications.
Mining and Metals Anchor Regional Demand
Mining, steelmaking, and metals account for around 24% share in the Latin America industrial gases ecosystem, according to the MarkNtel study. This reflects the region’s strong mineral base across Chile, Peru, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, and Colombia. Oxygen, nitrogen, argon, and hydrogen are used in ore processing, smelting, refining, furnace operations, flotation, and downstream metallurgical activities.
The World Bank’s mining overview highlights how extractive industries influence investment, infrastructure, employment, and resource governance. For Latin America, industrial gases are closely connected with this resource base because mining and metals facilities require dependable process gases to improve recovery rates, maintain safety, and support high-temperature industrial operations.
Oxygen Holds the Largest Gas Share
Oxygen is identified as the leading gas type in the MarkNtel report. Its role is especially important in steelmaking, non-ferrous metals, refining, healthcare, combustion, and wastewater treatment. In heavy industries, oxygen can improve furnace efficiency and combustion performance, while in healthcare, medical oxygen remains essential for hospitals, emergency care, and respiratory support.
The World Health Organization’s oxygen resources emphasize oxygen’s role in health systems and clinical care. This makes oxygen demand more resilient than purely cyclical industrial gases, particularly as Latin American countries continue expanding healthcare access and hospital capacity beyond major urban centers.
Chemicals and Energy Transition Add Growth Layers
Latin America’s chemicals, refining, fertilizers, and hydrogen-linked projects are creating additional demand for high-purity gases. Hydrogen is used in refining and chemical synthesis, nitrogen supports inerting and blanketing, and carbon dioxide is widely used in food and beverage applications. As industrial corridors expand, gas suppliers are investing in air separation, purification, liquefaction, and onsite supply systems.
The International Energy Agency’s hydrogen analysis is relevant because hydrogen is increasingly connected with lower-emission industrial pathways. Brazil’s green hydrogen pilots and regional clean-fuel projects may increase demand for oxygen, hydrogen handling systems, and related industrial gas infrastructure over time.
Brazil Leads the Regional Landscape
Brazil dominates the Latin America industrial gases space, supported by its metals, refining, chemicals, healthcare, food processing, and energy-transition sectors. Its large industrial base creates continuous demand for bulk supply, onsite generation, packaged gases, and specialty gas applications. Mexico, Chile, Argentina, Colombia, and Peru also contribute through automotive, mining, petrochemicals, electronics, and food-processing demand.
The Inter-American Development Bank’s industry and infrastructure work provides wider context for regional industrial competitiveness, technology adoption, and innovation. Industrial gas infrastructure fits within this agenda because stable process inputs can support productivity, safety, and modernization across resource-based and manufacturing sectors.
Supply Reliability and Safety Remain Critical
Industrial gases require complex logistics, including cylinders, bulk liquid delivery, cryogenic storage, onsite generation, pipelines, and plant-level safety systems. Supply disruptions can affect steel plants, mines, hospitals, refineries, and food processors. This makes reliability, storage capacity, and local production networks important considerations for both suppliers and end users.
The ISO gas cylinder standards catalogue provides technical references for safe storage and handling systems. As packaged gases, bulk supply, and onsite generation expand across Latin America, safety standards will remain central to reducing operational risk and supporting confidence among industrial, medical, and commercial users.
Outlook for Latin America’s Industrial Gases Ecosystem
Latin America’s industrial gases sector is expected to grow steadily as mining, metals, healthcare, food and beverages, refining, and clean-energy activity expand. The projected increase from USD 8.75 billion in 2025 to USD 11.88 billion by 2032 suggests stable demand across both traditional and emerging applications.
The next phase will depend on mining investment, supply-chain resilience, onsite generation, safety compliance, hydrogen-linked opportunities, and industrial modernization. Industrial gases may remain largely invisible to final consumers, but they are essential to how Latin America extracts, manufactures, preserves, treats, and transitions toward cleaner production systems.








