Tall Oil Rosin Market Hit By Upward Pricing Pressure
30 October 2000 00:00 [Source: ICB Americas]
By Doris de Guzman
A spike in demand for tall oil rosin (TOR), due to moderate
growth for tackifier resins, is the only bright spot in an
otherwise flat rosin market. Domestic consumption of TOR is up this
year as inventories built up from a depressed rosin market since
1998 are decreasing.
"Indications are all in place that the price [of TOR] is going
to escalate because demand is strong and supply cannot increase,"
says D.F. Stauffer, president of International Development
Associates, Inc. (IDA), a Mendenhall, Pa.-based consulting firm.
Domestic consumption of TOR increased 9 percent from 192.6 thousand
metric tons in 1999 to 209.9 thousand metric tons as of July this
year, according to IDA's recent study of the international rosin
markets.
The rosin market consists of TRO as well as gum and wood rosins,
which show flat to declining growth. Although rosin is a mature
market with little or no growth, reduced supply of TRO, coupled
with growing demand for tackifying resins, posting an annual growth
rate of roughly 3 percent, is leading to some tightness in the
rosin market. Although demand for synthetic, petroleum-based
hydrocarbon resins has surpassed its oleoresin counterpart, rising
high crude oil prices put rosin resins on a competitive level in
the tackifier and binder resins markets.
The supply of rosin is tied into pulp and paper production and
forest production. Global production of rosin reached a modern
record high of 1.2 million tons in 1997, but has since fallen off,
with production reaching only 1.06 million tons in 1999, according
to IDA.
"The rosin market is restricted by supply and not by demand.
There is only a certain amount of rosin available in the world and
that cannot be increased," says Mr. Stauffer. "The amount of tall
oil rosin produced depends on paper-pulp production. Also, the
supply of stump wood for wood rosin is exhausted and the gum rosin
produced is restricted by the number of pine trees, which cannot be
produced overnight."
Most of the rosin produced in the US is derived from tall oil.
TOR accounts for 31 percent of crude tall oil (CTO) use and is
obtained as by-products in the sulfate pulping of pine, commonly
known as the kraft pulping process. The largest US producers of TOR
are Arizona Chemical Company with total annual fractionation
capacity of 455,000 tons in terms of CTO input. Westvaco is next
with 230,000 tons, followed by Hercules Inc. with 170,000 tons,
including its Burlington, Ontario, Canada plant. Georgia-Pacific
follows with 120,000 tons of CTO production.
Production for both wood rosin and gum rosin has declined
steadily in the US. At present, crude gum rosin is collected by
small farmers and sold to a processor for cleaning and distillation
that is highly labor-intensive. In the US, only Akzo Nobel Resins
in Georgia is processing gum into gum turpentine and gum rosin that
warrants higher prices due to its preferred characteristics.
Wood rosin production, on the other hand, is very expensive due
to machinery and technology costs and as a result, only one
company, Hercules Inc., produces rosin by this method at its
Brunswick, Ga., plant. Early this year Hercules put its resins
division on the block, and on September 14, Eastman Chemical
Company announced its intent to buy Hercules' hydrocarbon resins
and selected portions of its rosins resins businesses (CMR 9/18/00,
pg.1). Also included in the sale are tall oil fractionation units
in Savannah, Ga., and Franklin, Va., which will be operated under
contract by Hercules. Resin operations at Hattiesburg, Miss., and
Burlington, Ontario, will remain with Hercules where products will
be produced for Eastman. Hercules' rosins resins operations at
Brunswick, Ga., where wood rosin is produced, are not included in
the sale but are pending to be divested.
The industry is not particularly worried about the pending
acquisition's effect on the TOR supply. "I don't think the rosin
market will be affected by this change of ownership since Eastman's
Lawter International is a huge consumer of tall oil rosin and
Hercules' CTO capacity will still be maintained by Eastman," says
an industry source.
MARTEK Biosciences Corp. reports its European patent for
docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) was revoked by the European Patent
Office as result of challenges made by several potential
competitors of the company. Martek plans to appeal the decision,
and management believes that the outcome will not impact the
company's sales into the infant formula industry.
PENRECO is increasing pricing on all USP, NF and technical grade
white mineral oils by 20c. per gallon and all USP and technical
grade petrolatums by 2c. per pound, effective October 30, or as
existing contracts allow. Current customers of record will receive
price protection on typical requirements through November 12.
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
< previous article(ICIS Podcast: Chemical News Central 2 November 2009)
For the latest chemical news, data and analysis that directly impacts your business sign up for a free trial
to ICIS news - the breaking online news service for the global chemical industry.
Get the facts and analysis behind the headlines from our market leading weekly magazine: sign up to a free
trial to ICIS Chemical Business.
Links posted in this story: