BASF Is Ready to Harvest Profits From Large Chemical Investments
20 January 2003 00:00 [Source: ICB Americas]
After a period of major capital investments in the Nafta region,
BASF is shifting gears. The company is trimming capital outlays
from peak levels in the area, while optimizing manufacturing
platforms and streamlining its business portfolios. To counteract
the effects of a business decline in 2001, BASF has in place a
strong strategic framework to enhance profitability.
The approach is showing results. Although margins remained under
pressure, 2002 earnings in the Nafta region were considerably
higher than in the previous year, despite ongoing challenges in the
economy, according to Jrgen Strube, chairman of the board and CEO
of BASF AG. Presenting the company's third quarter results last
November, Mr. Strube highlighted consumer confidence as the crucial
factor that will determine further growth in the region.
At the same time, Mount Olive, N.J.-based BASF Corp. plans to
reduce major capital outlays. After spending roughly $4 billion in
the Nafta region from 1997 to 2002, BASF Corp. will reduce that
number to less than $400 million per year.
BASF Corp. is an affiliate of the Ludwigshafen,
Germany-headquartered BASF Group, which is organized into five
business groups: Chemicals, Plastics & Fibers, Performance
Products, Ag Products and Nutrition, and Oil & Gas. All
business segments except Oil and Gas are represented in the Nafta
region, which contributed about $7 billion of the Group's 2001
sales of $29 billion.
The Chemicals sector has enjoyed a major portion of recent
company capital investment in the Nafta region. The crown jewel
during the company's heavy-duty investment phase was the
construction of its $1 billion steam cracker, in collaboration with
AtoFina Petrochemicals at Port Arthur, Tex. The 60/40
(BASF/AtoFina) joint venture, operated by BASF, began production
late last year with an initial capacity of 920,000 tons of ethylene
and 550,000 tons or propylene. A metathesis project is on track for
completion later this year. It will use butenes from another BASF
joint venture called Sabina to increase propylene yield to 860,000
tons while cutting the cracker's ethylene output to 830,000
tons.
Shell (60 percent), BASF (24 percent) and AtoFina (16 percent)
are partners in the Sabina joint venture. Located adjacent to the
BASF/AtoFina steam cracker in Port Arthur, it will produce 400,000
tons of butadiene, 300,000 tons of branched alkylate and roughly
400,000 of purified butenes, to be consumed primarily in the
BASF/AtoFina metathesis unit. These facilities, to be operated by
BASF, will also start up in late 2003.
Crude C4 feedstocks will be supplied from the Port Arthur
cracker and from Shell's Deer Park facility.
"As far as the Nafta region is concerned," says Carl Jennings,
president of BASF Nafta I region, "once the Sabina C4 project is
off and running, BASF will then focus on Dr. Strube's imperative,
'making the investments sweat,' meaning that Nafta business
strategy will primarily focus on portfolio and efficiency
improvements as well as higher capacity utilization to gain maximum
benefit from existing investments."
The strategy is showing signs of success. 2002 showed real
improvement over 2001, notes Mr. Jennings. "After a very
challenging 2001, we are on track to return to profitability in
2002. We've put the framework in place and the start-up costs are
behind us," he says. Prices, however, still remain a concern, he
adds.
Chemicals reported a 21 percent gain in worldwide sales for the
third quarter of 2002. The new Port Arthur steam cracker is
identified as the major contributor for the increase in
volumes.
The plasticizers business, usually an early economic trend
indicator, im-proved during 2002, while oxo alcohol margins are
still under pressure. For the coming year, the company will focus
its efforts on re-establishing price/margin leadership, says Mr.
Jennings. "We need olefins cash margins of 9 to 10 cents per pound,
and we're not getting that on average right now. We expect this to
improve during 2003/2004, but the Iraq issue remains the wild
card."
BASF is changing strategy in the area of EO/EG (ethylene
oxide/ethylene glycol) and will primarily pursue purified EO. Last
July, it announced permanent closure of two older EO units at its
Geismar, La., complex, which had a capacity of 270,000 metric tons.
At the same time, the company announced closure of its 390,000
metric ton glycol unit. BASF will continue to operate its newest EO
unit at the site and will increase capacity of purified product
there to 220,000 metric tons for downstream internal requirements
and merchant sales.
Intermediates and inorganics are also part of BASF's North
American chemicals business segment, and Wayne Hill, group vice
president for BASF Corp.'s Intermedi-ates and Inorganics, reports
that 2002 showed very nice sales volume increases throughout the
year. Sales in intermediates and inorganics rose by 7.5 percent
during the third quarter of 2002, compared to 2001. Prices, on the
other hand, still remain under pressure, Mr. Hill concedes.
Roughly 54 percent of intermediates and inorganics sales consist
of diols, produced at the Geismar, La., and Freeport, Tex., sites.
Amines, also manufactured at Geismar, claim about 18 percent. Among
its specialties products, the business also offers catalysts and
electronic chemicals.
In 2001, BASF successfully started up its $100 million, 25,000
ton-per-year 1,6 hexanediol (HDO) plant at Freeport, Tex. In 2002,
the company followed up at the same site with a 60,000 ton-per-year
plant for neopentyl glycol (NPG), which is marketed as Neol and
used as precursor resin for powder coatings.
The business group has launched several far-reaching cost
cutting processes. They include setting up minimum order sizes for
certain products while streamlining the portfolio to eliminate the
clutter of smaller products, Mr. Hill notes.
BASF Corp.'s Performance Chemicals business experienced
significant restructuring during the last few years. This sector,
with sales in the range of $650 million, consists of the former
colorants business, which was merged with the specialty chemicals
group (surfactants, chelates, biocides, printing systems, leather
and textile chemicals, and fuel additives). In November of 1999,
the company merged its textile dyes operations into DyStar, the
50/50 joint venture between Bayer and Hoechst. DyStar is now owned
equally by the three partners and claims about $1.1 billion in
sales, corresponding to more than 20 percent of the global dyes
market. About 50 percent of the performance chemicals portfolio is
targeted at the detergents industry, while 20 percent serves the
coatings, plastics and specialties industries.
Many of these markets suffer from severe pricing pressure,
overcapacity or Asian competition, notes Michael Stumpp, group vice
president for Performance Chemicals, North America. The US textile
and leather sectors are under strong competitive pressure from
Asia, Mr. Stumpp says. Citing difficult market conditions, BASF
announced in March of last year that it would discontinue
production of textile and leather chemicals at its Charlotte,
Chesapeake Drive, production facility in North Carolina by the end
of 2002. Several products will be moved to other production
locations.
The company says that it has set the stage for above GDP growth
for the sector. Specifically, it will boost its market presence in
the areas of surfactants, chelates, biocides and printing systems.
Biocides sales were doubled during the last year, Mr. Stumpp notes.
Plans also include increased focus in the automotive leather
area.
Additional moves to increase competitive strength in Performance
Chemicals involve the setting up of strategic alliances with top
BASF customers and increasing global research and development
spending by roughly 10 percent.
Driven by the need to roll out new products, the performance
sector has introduced a slew of innovative portfolio additions. "We
are beginning to harvest the fruits of our efforts," Mr. Stumpp
says. On the list are new surfactants designed to reduce foaming, a
new Variocrom effect pigment with automotive and high value
consumer product applications, X-Fast quick-stir-in pigments, a
chrome-free leather tanning system, solvent-free leather finishing
system and chelates for soil remediation, for which Mr. Stumpp has
especially high hopes for growth.
BASF participation in the superabsorbent polymers (SAP) market
is relatively new. Primarily used in diapers, superabsorbents are
partially cross-linked polyacrylates that can absorb about 25
percent of their weight in water. Fortified by existing acrylic
acid capabilities and attracted by a projected growth rate of 8
percent annually for the product, BASF decided to enter the world
stage for SAPs roughly five years ago, with the acquisition of
Clariant's superabsorbent business. The move netted a 95,000 metric
ton-per-year production site at Portsmouth, Va., while a smaller
Frankfurt/Main, Germany, plant entered a toll manufacturing
arrange-ment with BASF.
In November of 1999, BASF continued its aggressive global SAP
strategy by purchasing Chemdal International, a subsidiary of Amcol
International Corp., for close to $660 million. The move netted
superabsorbent production on three continents-Europe, the US and
Asia. At the time, it almost doubled BASF's SAP capacity to roughly
240,000 tons per year.
The company gained production sites in the US in Aberdeen, Miss.
To serve Aberdeen's feedstock needs, BASF boosted acrylic acid
output at Freeport, Tex., from 300,000 to 360,000 metric tons per
year. Currently BASF claims about 39 percent of the North American
superabsorbents business, with Stockhausen and Dow being its main
competitors.
In 2001, the world market for superabsorbents was estimated at
roughly 1.6 billion. Europe and North America each claim about 35
percent of the total, and the growth areas of Asia and South
America consume about 12 percent each.
BASF has made market share a priority in addition to reducing
manufacturing and logistics costs. Process improvement efforts have
been launched at the company's production sites at Aberdeen and
Portsmouth.
BASF is back integrated into acrylic monomers, acrylic acid and
acrylic esters, the major feedstocks for superabsorbent polymers.
Acrylics also represent about 42 percent of the company's
functional polymers business group.
In addition, about 23 percent of functional polymers are paper
chemicals, which include coating binders, colorants and process
chemicals. The remaining 35 percent of the business area includes
polymers, with specific applications in construction, architectural
coatings, adhesives, carpets and fiber bonding.
Overall, the Functional Polymers business area is challenged by
market consolidation in key customer areas and increasing raw
material costs, according to BASF. In response, the company has
reorganized its paper business, established global key account
teams and introduced new product technologies in certain markets.
Fixed costs have been reduced 18 percent from 2000 levels, and two
manufacturing plants were closed.
Above all, the Functional Polymers business has been pushing for
product innovation. Among the entries unveiled have been
architectural coating lattices, which allow the production of low-
or zero-VOC house paints, and asphalt additives and treatments,
designed to increase road life. The sector also rolled out high
strength paper coating binders and formaldehyde-free adhesives for
the replacement of phenol-formaldehyde resins.
In summary, the BASF Chemical businesses in the Nafta region are
ready to harvest the fruits of their last investment phase, says
Mr. Jennings. "With our major acquisitions and large plant
investments behind us, the BASF Chemicals businesses in North
America are positioned well for sales growth and sustained
profitability."
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
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Links posted in this story:
- Acrylic Acid
, - Ethanol
, - Basf AG
, - Butadiene
, - Ethylene Glycol, Mono
, - Ethylene Oxide
, - Ethylene
, - Formaldehyde
, - Phenol
, - Propylene