Product Profile: Benzene
05 May 2003 00:00 [Source: ICB]
Last year was a time of recovery and fundamental change in
Europe. Producers continue to grapple with market volatility and
unpredictability
Uses
Benzene's main consumer, taking about 53% of output, is
ethylbenzene/styrene, followed by cumene/phenol with about 18%,
then cyclohexane and aniline/nitrobenzene. It is also used in the
production of maleic anhydride, alkylbenzenes and
chlorobenzenes.
Supply/demand
Benzene markets recovered last year after a disastrous 2001.
However, in Europe, 2002 was marked by a high degree of
unpredictability and volatility, as well as some fundamental
changes in market dynamics, as an alternative pricing scheme
emerged. Demand has been fairly strong in the first quarter but is
now slowing, particularly from styrene, where producers are said to
be cutting back output as downstream polymer markets slacken.
Phenol and cyclohexane demand is still reported to be healthy.
Supply is improving and returning to balance after a tight first
few months due to turnarounds and production problems. The
resulting spike in spot prices has attracted imports from the US
and Korea for arrival in late April or May. Shell started up a new
extraction unit in Moerdijk, the Netherlands, in late 2002. It
closed a 80 000 tonne/year plant in Berre, France, at the end of
February.
Pricing
European second quarter contracts have initially settled at
E525/tonne, up E70/tonne from quarter one, although some buyers are
still resisting. Monthly contracts were agreed at E548/tonne in
April, up from E525/tonne for March. Support has gathered behind
the monthly settlement which has been in place since early last
year. However, big consumers are still opting for the stability of
a quarterly agreement and both systems continue to run in
parallel.
Spot levels peaked at $650/tonne in March after a quarter of
very volatile feedstock prices. Latest spot deals were reported at
$320-335/tonne fob NWE, having dropped sharply from $420-430/tonne
a week earlier. The spread with naphtha has also improved. With
naphtha continuing to weaken, reaching $210-215/tonne in late
April, and benzene contracts at $562/tonne, the delta has widened
to over $300/tonne.
Technology
The main source of benzene production in Europe is from
pyrolysis gasoline (pygas) co-produced in the steam cracking of
naphtha, gasoil or condensates to make olefins. Another source is
the selective disproportionation of toluene, where benzene is
co-produced in the manufacture of a paraxylene-rich xylenes stream.
Hydrodealkylation of toluene is a third process and units are
normally run to maintain the balance of supply. However, this is a
high-cost route and benzene prices need to be high enough to
encourage production. Benzene is also co-produced in BP/UOP's
Cyclar process, which converts butanes and propanes to
aromatics.
Health and safety
Benzene is a clear, highly flammable liquid. Flashback is a
hazard because of its heavy vapours. It is acutely toxic and vapour
can be absorbed through the lungs or skin. It is a cumulative
poison, which builds up in the blood and tissues and is a suspected
carcinogen.
Outlook
There is plenty of capacity available to meet demand which is
growing at about 2%/year in Europe, and 3-4%/year globally. CMAI
predicts world demand to reach over 40m tonne in 2007, a rise of
7.5m tonne on 2002. Europe will see increased consumption from
Lyondell's 640 000 tonne/year styrene unit in Rotterdam, the
Netherlands, which is due online in the second half of this
year.
Western Europe will remain a net importer. The Middle East will
remain a major supplier and will increase its exports to the region
by over 100 000 tonne by 2006. New capacity is due onstream in Iran
and Kuwait in 2005 but, from 2006, new derivative plants are
scheduled to start production and exports from the Middle East will
decrease.
WEST EUROPEAN BENZENE CAPACITY, '000 TONNE/YEAR
| Aral |
Gelsenkirchen, Germany |
200 |
|
Atofina
|
Carling, France |
320 |
|
Feyzin, France |
110 |
|
Gonfreville, France |
200 |
|
BASF
|
Antwerp, Belgium |
250 |
|
Mannheim, Germany |
320 |
|
Borealis
|
Porvoo, Finland |
130 |
|
BP
|
Grangemouth, UK |
295 |
|
Koln, Germany |
240 |
|
Cepsa
|
Algeciras, Spain |
245 |
|
Huelva, Spain |
170 |
|
ConocoPhillips
|
Immingham, UK |
200 |
|
Dow Chemical
|
Bohlen, Germany |
320 |
|
Terneuzen, Netherlands |
915 |
|
EniChem
|
Porto Torres, Italy |
160 |
|
Erdol-Raffinerie-Emsland
|
Lingen, Germany 75 |
|
ExxonMobil
|
Botlek, Netherlands |
600 |
|
FinaAntwerp Olefins
|
Antwerp, Belgium 170 |
|
Gexaro*
|
Lavera, France |
200 |
|
Huntsman Petrochemicals
|
Wilton, UK 435 |
|
OMV
|
Burghausen, Germany |
160 |
|
PCK
|
Schwedt, Germany |
70 |
|
Petrogal
|
Oporto, Portugal |
80 |
| Polimeri Europa |
Porto Marghera, Italy |
110 |
|
Priolo, Italy |
440 |
|
Sarroch, Italy |
50 |
|
Repsol YPF
|
Puertollano, Spain |
125 |
|
Ruhr Oel
|
Gelsenkirchen, Germany |
370 |
|
Sabic EuroPetrochemicals
|
Geleen, Netherlands 350 |
|
Shell
|
Godorf, Germany |
510 |
|
Moerdijk, Netherlands |
500 |
|
Stanlow, UK |
240 |
| Shell & DEA Oil |
Heide, Germany |
120 |
|
Wesseling, Germany |
160 |
|
TotalFinaElf
|
Antwerp, Belgium |
250 |
|
Gonfreville, France |
160 |
|
VFT Belgium
|
Zelzate, Belgium |
60 |
|
* Atofina/BP
|
| Source: ECN/CNI |
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
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