Chemical Profile - Fluorocarbons
30 September 2002 00:00 [Source: ICB Americas]
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FLUOROCARBONS September 30, 2002
|
PRODUCER
|
CAPACITY*
|
|
Air Products and Chemicals, Tamaqua, Pa.
|
10
|
|
Atofina Chemicals, Calvert City, Ky.
|
150
|
|
Atofina Chemicals, Wichita, Kan.
|
77
|
|
DuPont, Corpus Christi, Tex.
|
140
|
|
DuPont, Deepwater, N.J.
|
40
|
|
DuPont, Louisville, Ky.
|
250
|
|
Great Lakes Chemical, El Dorado, Ark.
|
6
|
|
Halocarbon Products, North Augusta, S.C.
|
2
|
|
Honeywell, Baton Rouge, La.
|
150
|
|
Honeywell, El Segundo, Calif.
|
80
|
|
Honeywell, Geismar, La.
|
60
|
|
Ineos Fluor, Saint Gabriel, La.
|
68
|
|
MDA Manufacturing, Decatur, Ala.
|
40
|
|
Solvay, Thorofare, N.J.
|
40
|
|
Total
|
1,113
|
*Millions of pounds per year of fluorocarbon capacity. The
fluorocarbon industry is still undergoing major shifts in
structure, begun as a result of the 1987 Montreal Protocol, which
is the guideline for world phaseout of ozone-depleting chemicals.
The term "fluorocarbon" is generic and applies to substituted,
saturated, aliphatic, C1 to C4 hydrocarbons that contain fluorine
and hydrogen; the older products additionally contain chlorine. The
group comprises: 1. CFCs - Fully halogenated chlorofluorocarbons
containing only carbon, fluorine and chlorine. These are known
ozone-depleters, and new production of these products for emissive
uses has been phased out in all developed countries. 2. HCFCs -
Hydrogen-containing chlorofluorocarbons are less stable and less
ozone-destructive than CFCs. These products are considered
transitional and are scheduled for eventual phaseout, being
replaced with environmentally benign HFCs. 3. HFCs - Fluorocarbons
with no chlorine and zero ozone-depletion potential. These contain
only carbon, fluorine and hydrogen. These newer replacement
fluorocarbons typically have significantly lower global warming
potential than CFCs. Most fluorocarbon alternatives to CFCs are
based on HFCs. 4. Fully fluorinated hydrocarbon chemicals, which
contain only carbon and fluorine and have zero ozone depletion
potential. In August 2002, Honeywell began producing HFC-245fa at a
new facility in Geismar, La. The new fluorocarbon product is
targeted at replacing HCFC-141b as a blowing agent in rigid
polyurethane and polyisocyanurate foams. Honeywell acquired
AlliedSignal Inc. and the Geismar plant in 1999. Atofina Chemicals
announced in May 2002 that engineering work for a major HFC-32
investment at Calvert City, Ky., was underway. Atofina also
completed engineering work for an HFC-134a plant expansion in
Calvert City. Atofina's Wichita, Kan., site manufactures only one
fluorochemical, R-22, and the company has decided to discontinue
production at Wichita at the end of 2002. In May 2002, Solvay SA
completed its 1.3 billion ($1.27 billion) acquisition of Ausimont
from Edison and Longside International. In August 2002, Solvay
America Inc. and Dyneon LLC entered into a binding letter of intent
for the sale of the North American-based Solvay Fluoropolymers Inc.
to Dyneon. In January 2001 ICI completed the sale of its Klea
fluorochemicals business to Ineos. The Klea business was
subsequently renamed Ineos Fluor. In 2000, LaRoche Industries idled
66 million pounds of fluorocarbon capacity at Gramercy, La., used
for production of HCFC-22 and HCFC-141b. Profile last published
10/11/99; this revision 9/30/02.
DEMAND
2000: 867 million pounds; 2001: 869 million pounds; 2005: 904
million pounds. Demand equals production plus imports, which were
19 million pounds in 2000 and 19 million pounds in 2001, less
exports, which were 110 million pounds in 2000 and 88 million
pounds in 2001.
GROWTH
Historical (1996-2001): 4.9 percent per year; Future: 1.0 percent
per year through 2005.
PRICE
Historical (1996-2001): High, $2.50 per pound, HFC-l34a, list,
bulk, del.; low, $1.50, same basis. Current: $2.50, same basis.
USES
 |
|
| Fluorocarbons uses. |
|
Refrigeration and air-conditioning, 45 percent; polymer precursors,
30 percent; foam-blowing, 18 percent; aerosol propellants, 4
percent; solvent cleaning, 2 percent; miscellaneous, 1
percent.
STRENGTH
Refrigerants are the largest fluorocarbon market, consuming more
than 390 million pounds last year. Growth is moderate at 2.5
percent annually, being mitigated by conservation measures. Before
phaseouts began, the major refrigerants were CFCs -11 and -12,
HCFC-22 and R-502. While these have been largely replaced by
HCFC-22, HCFC-123, HFC-134a and a number of blends, the HCFCs are
themselves being phased out as well, and HFC products are taking
their place. In refrigeration, HFC-134a and the blend R-404a (HFCs
-125, -143a and 134a) are the dominant replacements. One
fluorocarbon market that has been unaffected by concerns about
ozone depletion or global warming is their use as precursors in the
production of fluoropolymers and fluoroelastomers. Because they are
consumed in the manufacturing process, they pose no threat. Four
different fluoro-carbons (HCFC-22, HCFC-142b, HFC-152a and CFC-113)
are used as feedstocks for PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene), PFA
(tetrafluoroethylene perfluoroalkoxy vinyl ether copolymer resins),
ETFE (ethylene tetrafluoroethylene copolymer resins) and PVDF
(polyvinylidene fluoride). Fluorocarbon demand growth is projected
to be 6 percent annually through 2005.
WEAKNESS
Shrinking demand in foam-blowing is fluorocarbon's major weakness
in the North American market. A hydrochlorofluorocarbon approved
for foam-blowing in 1992, HCFC-141b, has experienced limited growth
over the past five years, 0.7 percent annually. But its production
and importation will be prohibited in January 2003, and
non-fluorocarbon alternatives are taking over much of the market.
Consequently, a 10 percent annual decline of fluorocarbons in this
application is anticipated for the forecast period.
OUTLOOK
As a result of the 1987 Montreal Protocol agreement and individual
country regulations controlling new production, consumption and
trade of CFCs and HCFCs, the global fluorocarbons market continues
to undergo a major transformation toward greater use of more
environmentally benign HFCs and non-fluorocarbon alternatives.
Modest growth (2.5 percent) is expected in the major sector,
refrigeration; strong growth (6 percent) for the second largest
sector, polymer precursors; and constriction (minus 10 percent) in
the third largest sector, foam-blowing. Aggregate annual demand is
forecast at 1 percent through 2005.
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
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