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Asian Chemical Connections

China Coal-To-Olefins: Water Not An Issue

By John Richardson CONVENTIONAL wisdom has it that the water issue stands in the way of the growth of the coal-to-olefins (CTO) industry in China. The process consumes a lot of water  – between 15-20 tonnes for every tonne of olefins produced – which compares with 0.80-2.17 tonnes of water for every tonne of oil […]

China To Keep Polyolefins Imports Out

By John Richardson THERE has been a lot of talk about how fully integrated coal-to-polyolefins plants in China will compete exceptionally well with naphtha crackers on a variable cost basis. OK, in terms of capital costs, the whole coal-to-polyolefins chain is some 2-3 times more expensive than building a naphtha cracker complex. You have to, […]

China’s “Whack-A-Mole” Game Continues

By John Richardson THE blog loves playing the the “whack-a-mole game” in our local arcade. How it works is that every time a plastic mole pops up, you have to try and whack it back down with a hammer in order to win points. Moles just keep popping up, no matter how frantically you deploy […]

China Identifies The Smart People

By John Richardson CHINA’S government, via a very important statement on the state-run newswire Xinhua, have identified the smart people. They are those who have already realised that China is not going to “blink”. There will be no big new economic stimulus package and the measures to stabilise growth, that were announced last week, were […]

China Housing No Longer A One-Way Bet

By John Richardson CHINA’s real estate sector was responsible for 16% of the country’s GDP growth, 33% of fixed asset investment, 20% of outstanding loans, 26% of new loans, and contributed 39% to government revenues in 2013, according to Nomura. And so the potential downside to chemicals demand from a correction in the property sector […]

The Future For China Auto Sales

By John Richardson The distance from end-use markets didn’t matter for chemicals and polymers producers during the 2008-2013 credit surge in China because, as we said yesterday, demand was so good that few people were willing to ask too many awkward questions. But now the questions need to be asked. One of the questions we […]

Spotting China’s Main Event

By John Richardson WE will get round to writing about the impact of US propane pricing on the operating rates of new Chinese propane dehydrogenation (PDH) –to-polypropylene (PP) investments, as we promised yesterday. Honestly, we will – trust us – and we will also eventually talk about how China’s methanol-to-olefins (MTO) start-ups might be a lot less than […]

China And The Need To Keep On Digging

Sources: ICIS Consulting, World Bank and China’s NBS   By John Richardson POLYETHYLENE (PE) demand growth in China during 2007-2012 was essentially a story of: Firstly, excessive stimulus which compensated for the global financial crisis. And then from April 2011 up until the third quarter of 2012, a reduction in stimulus as the Chinese government […]

The Great Polyethylene Mystery Hunt Continues

By John Richardson REPORTS of soaring apparent polyethylene (PE) demand (imports plus domestic production) in China continue as the search also persists for an explanation, given the country’s weak macro-economic environment. Last week we wrote of  a 13% increase in demand in January-June of this year  compared with the same months in 2011, based on data […]

China’s SMEs Face New Lending Problem

By John Richardson CHINA’S small and medium-sized (SMEs) may already be finding it increasingly difficult to source trade finance as a result of the late June credit crackdown warned Winnie Wu, Hong Kong-based research analyst at Merrill Lynch,  who was quoted in this article in The Economist. “A tightening of reckless credit is necessary in […]

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