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Asian Chemical Connections

Picking The Winners And Losers

  Source of picture: ICIS   By John Richardson ICIS has just published its Top 100 listing for 2009, which, not surprisingly, reveals the nothing-short-of devastating impact of the global economic crisis on chemical company financial performances. “Unprecedented operating and financial conditions helped drive annual sales for industry giants down more than 30%,” writes my […]

When Does Consolidation Become A Strategic Problem?

All our yesterdays… the ICI Runcorn site in its heyday Source of picture: Chesterchronicle.co.uk     By John Richardson Yesterday’s blog post on Petronas illustrates once again how the state-owned giants, albeit in this case one that is about to undergo a partial IPO, are increasingly dominating the global petrochemicals industry. The history of the […]

A sleeping giant awakens

By Malini Hariharan It’s a question that has puzzled many – why has Petronas, the state-owned Malaysian oil and gas major, not made any effort to scale up its petrochemicals business in the last five years. But there are signs that this is changing. Petronas has spun off the petrochemicals operations into a new company […]

Middle East Study Casts Doubt On Downstream Strategy

Petro Rabigh Source of picture: arabianoilandgas.com   By John Richardson Petro Rabigh’s attempt to move further down the value chain raises interesting questions over exactly how successful the Saudi joint venture will be in attracting the necessary investment. As my fellow blogger Malini Hariharan wrote earlier this week, plans for the second phase of Petro […]

Map Ta Phut concerns refuse to fade away

By Malini Hariharan Companies with projects at Thailand’s Map Ta Phut must have heaved a sigh of relief last week after the Administrative court ruled that 74 out of 76 suspended projects could move ahead after completing health impact assessment studies and obtaining necessary approvals. The court’s decision was based on a list of 11 […]

A Downturn With Areas Of Persistent Strength

Tougher sanctions set to reduce Iranian exports Source of picture: amix.dk/blog/post/19116   By John Richardson I met a hedge-fund manager yesterday who wanted a straight answer as to why he felt that ethylene, propylene and polyolefin margins are holding-up relatively well, despite an apparent flood of new capacity. “The margins, particularly for polyproplyene (PP), are much […]

Long-term Shift In LPG Cracking Economics

  Source of picture: the truth about cars   By John Richardson WHEN my fellow blogger Malini Hariharan once asked a particularly unhelpful individual who used to track polyethylene (PE) markets what was going on, his only response was “conditions are volatile”. And so as you kick-off this fine and sunny morning (at least it is here […]

Diminishing Returns From Middle East Projects

Downtown Riyadh     By John Richardson As my fellow blogger Malini Hariharan wrote last week “the projects environment in the Middle East has irrevocably changed” and with it the rather glib and outdated assumption still being frequently made that building capacity in the region represents a licence to print money. First of all, as […]

The Unexpected Bonus For Polyolefins – In Summary

Every dark cloud has a silver lining… By John Richardson GLOBAL polyolefins markets are being kept very tight be a collection of what might seem like only temporary factors. But in the case of the butene-1 shortage, for example, (see below) this has been restricting linear-low density polyethylene (LLDPE) for more than a year. And many […]

US Polyolefins Confront Tough H2

Source of picture: www.usaembassy.com     By John Richardson THE US poyolefins industry has enjoyed a remarkable recovery since the depths of the financial crisis thanks to major feedstock advantages in polyethylene (PE) and the rebound in the domestic economy. Booming demand from China also attracted substantial imports of PE and polypropylene (PP) from the […]

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