Hydrogen Peroxide Prices on the Rise, But Demand Expected to Slow This Year
22 January 2001 00:00 [Source: ICB Americas]
By Jennifer Ouellette
Prices for hydrogen peroxide continue to rise as producers
struggle to recoup losses incurred from skyrocketing energy costs.
After two years of strong growth as high as 10 percent, fueled by
the recovery of the pulp and paper industry and compliance with new
environmental regulations, the industry is expected to post
significantly lower growth in 2001.
The slowing demand comes at a time of rising prices, which are
resulting in part from higher production costs. Solvay Interox Inc.
will raise its off-list prices for all grades of hydrogen peroxide,
except electronic grades, for the entire Nafta region, effective
February 1. For US customers, this will mean an increase of 2.8
cents per pound for 70 percent product, 2 cents per pound for 50
percent product, and 1.4 cents per pound for 35 percent product.
Prices will go up by 4 cents per pound and C$130 per metric ton for
100 percent basis hydrogen peroxide. This increase is expected to
hold.
Prices have been increasing since the end of 1998, but producer
margins have never recovered from the sharp downturn in pricing
from 1996 to 1998, and price levels remain well below the
historical industry price curve, explains Thomas Ball, marketing
director for hydrogen peroxide division of FMC Corporation. Gerhard
Scherer, manager of business intelligence for Eka Chemicals Inc.,
reports that average pricing in 1993 was 23 cents per pound for 50
percent hydrogen peroxide, with prices peaking in January 1996 at
33 cents per pound for 50 percent grade.
Compounding the situation has been the sharp spike in the cost
of natural gas, which is a major cost driver in peroxide
production, accounting for as much as 30 percent of production
costs, depending on the specific plant configuration. "FMC will
need a significant price increase just to offset the unprecedented
rise in energy costs," says Mr. Ball.
Although producers successfully implemented two earlier price
increases in 2000, rising production costs have offset margin
gains. "The strong increase in production costs, primarily due to
the base raw material natural gas, more than consumed the gains
obtained from the increases," says Ernst Barenschee, business
director of peroxygen chemicals for Degussa-Hüls. "In
addition, the implemented increases have been limited by contract
terms in many cases, with the result that prices remain below the
long-term average necessary to justify new investments." Earlier
this month, Degussa-Hüls implemented a $0.001 per pound
temporary fuel surcharge on all deliveries of hydrogen peroxide
within the US and Canada.
The pulp and paper industry, which has struggled for several
years, is the largest end-use sector for hydrogen peroxide,
accounting for 65 percent of the North American market, according
to Mr. Scherer. Throughout 1999, US paper companies focused on
closing mills and consolidation to combat weak pricing and reduced
growth, but the industry rebounded in late 1999 and the first half
of 2000. During that time period, the Canadian Pulp and Paper
Association reported record shipments of pulp, paper and board,
with mill operating rates reaching 94 percent and profits doubling
to roughly $600 million. North American pulp and paper producers
consumed an estimated 900 million pounds of hydrogen peroxide in
1999 alone.
However, despite high-volume sales and a strong US economy,
commodity pulp and paper prices have been depressed worldwide, with
lower profits and only modest sales. Capacity increased by a mere
1.5 percent in 1999 and 1.3 percent in 2000, compared with an
annual average of 2.1 percent since 1991, according to the latest
industry data by the American Forest & Paper Association
(AF&PA).
The AF&PA projects capacity to rise at an annual average
rate of 0.7 percent in the next three years. "As far as we can
tell, the pulp industry recovery of the last 18 months is over,"
says Mr. Ball. "All indicators suggest that the North American pulp
and paper industry is headed into a slowdown in 2001." The US
economy is also showing early signs of a slowdown in 2001, and
other major end-use sectors for hydrogen peroxide are expected to
slow down with it.
The industry has also struggled with overcapacity following the
Environmental Protection Agency's decision to opt for elemental
chlorine-free bleaching (ECF) instead of total chlorine-free (TCF)
bleaching, a process that uses four times as much hydrogen peroxide
as ECF, adding capacity accordingly. Several producers idled
capacity to alleviate the pressure on the market. Solvay idled 110
million pounds at its Deer Park, Tex., facility in 1998, which
remains shut down. FMC mothballed 30 million pounds of annual
capacity at its plant in Springhill, West Va., and another 100
million pounds of annual capacity at its Bayport, Tex., plant that
same year. FMC has restarted production at the Bayport facility,
producing hydrogen peroxide as customer demand requires. Don Magid,
marketing director for Solvay, reports that the company is waiting
to see if market conditions in 2001 improve sufficiently to
economically justify reopening the Deer Park plant.
That strategy has been largely successful, with Solvay's Mr.
Magid reporting tight supplies for hydrogen peroxide going into
2001, with operating rates in the upper 90th percentile. He expects
demand to continue to increase, since the chemical "is economical
and an ideal chemical for environmental applications and
bleaching," but at a slightly lower rate of 5 percent.
Other major producers expect similar lower growth rates, largely
because the ECF conversion process is nearing completion, as well
as the slowdowns in pulp and paper and the US economy as a
whole.
However, FMC's Mr. Ball is less sanguine, projecting a growth
rate as low as 2 percent in 2001, depending on the severity of the
economic slowdown. "My experience is that people tend to project
off of recent history," he explains. "When you've seen two years of
10-percent demand growth, it's hard to turn around and project the
next year to only grow at 2 percent. But some of the fundamentals
that fueled that strong demand in the past are definitely
changing." Degussa's Dr. Barenschee also forecasts growth of
between 2 percent and 4 percent in 2001, with supply and demand
coming into balance, and no new capacity slated to come on line.
"Debottlenecking seems to be sufficient to accommodate further
growth in demand for the next years to come," he says.
CALCIUM CHLORIDE--Tetra Tech- nologies Inc. will increase prices
for the following products by $20 per short ton, effective February
1, or as contracts allow: Tetra 80, 77-82 percent calcium chloride
pellets, Express 94-97 percent calcium chloride mini-pellets,
Briners grade 94-97 percent mini-pellets, and FCC grade 94-97
percent calcium chloride mini-pellets.
CAUSTIC SODA--Nexen Chemicals has increased the prices of the
following products, effectively immediately, or as contracts
permit: caustic soda by C$40 ($26.46) per ton; 50 percent caustic
solution by C$615 ($407) per ton; and 73 percent caustic solution
by C$630 ($417) per ton.
HYDROGEN PEROXIDE--FMC Corporation will increase off-list
hydrogen peroxide prices, effective February 1, by 4c. per pound
(100 percent basis) in the US and C$130 per metric ton in Canada.
The increase is specific to standard, technical chlorate, food,
cosmetics and environmental grades of hydrogen peroxide.
SILICAS--Crosfield Company has initiated a 6 percent increase on
its silicas product line, effective February 1, or as contracts
allow.
SODIUM METASILICATE--PQ Corporation has increased schedule and
off-schedule prices for sodium metasilicate pentahydrate $1.60 cwt,
and anhydrous has increased by $2.50 cwt.
SODIUM SILICATE--Occidental Chemical Corporation has increased
its schedule and off-schedule prices of S-25 sodium metasilicate
anhydrous by $2.50 cwt or $50 per ton, and Uniflo 26 sodium
metasilicate pentahydrate by $1.60 cwt or $32 per ton, effective
immediately. The increase applies to all spot customers and as
terms permit to contract customers.
PQ Corporation has increased schedule and off-schedule prices
for sodium silicate liquids $0.75 cwt, while lump glass and
anhydrous glass powder products have been increased $1.90 cwt,
effective immediately, or as contracts permit.
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
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