Home Blogs Asian Chemical Connections

Asian Chemical Connections

South Korea To Raise C2 Capacity By 9.2 Percent

By John Richardson SOUTH Korea is set to raise its ethylene and propylene capacities by 700,000 tonne/year and 740,000 tonne/year by 2013, Seo Kyung Sun, executive director of the consulting business of Seoul-based Chemical Market Research Inc (CMRI) told the blog last week. Downstream expansions in polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP) and ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) […]

The LPG Cracking Myth Debunked

We are deeply ashamed of ourselves….     By John Richardson AT the risk of boring you completely senseless let us once again return to the subject of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and its likely usefulness as a cracker feedstock over the coming years. The reason why we keep going on and on about this subject […]

Letting supply lead the way

By Malini Hariharan Conventional wisdom suggests that it is best to build a plant where the market is. But can ready availability of material develop markets. Take the case of India. In an interesting presentation at India Chem last week, Mathew George of Indian Oil Corp (IOC), pointed that each of the top five polymer […]

Polyolefins Supply Surge Warning – Yet Again

By John Richardson A GREAT deal more polyolefins supply is expected to hit the Asian markets over the next few months resulting in what two chemicals analysts tell the blog will be depressed margins up until March next year. After that the analysts – one in Singapore and the other in South Korea – predict […]

Make hay while the sun shines

By Malini Hariharan The petrochemical industry is all about making the most of unexpected developments and that is what we are seeing in paraxylene (PX) and purified terephthalic acid (PTA) markets. Led by polyester, PX and PTA prices have risen to levels last seen in 2008. And polyester has been benefiting from a run up […]

Flood Of LPG Supply On The Way

Here is another article on the liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) market, a subject we have covererd several times on the blog over the last few months. Below we discuss how the temporary supply constraints that have kept LPG tight this year look set to end, creating a very attractive feedstock option for higher-cost Asian cracker […]

Supercycle Claims Dismissed

By John Richardson THE Morgan Stanley Supercycle report, which we first blogged on last Friday, has created a big stir among the blog’s contacts.  Click herefor a copy of the report RI_PETROCHEM_BLUEPAPER2010.pdf    As we said in this ICIS news article on both the Morgan Stanley report, and one from Merrill Lynch which is in a similar […]

Reliance’s polyester play

By Malini Hariharan With Indian polyester demand growing steadily at 10%/year Reliance Industries has renewed its focus on expansions along the chain. Projects that were put on hold after the 2008 economic crisis have been revived and deadlines set. The company’s plans include two new worldscale purified terephthalic acid (PTA) plants and investments in paraxylene […]

Capitalising on the cotton crisis

  By Malini Hariharan Cotton prices have hit a 140-year high on the ICE futures in the US creating room for further price hikes across the polyester chain. Prices of paraxylene (PX), purified terephthalic acid (PTA), monoethylene glycol (MEG) and polyester fibre and yarn have escalated sharply in the last few months as a supply […]

Polyethylene And The Stories People Tell

  …..quite possibly, yes, but it matters not what you say, only how you tell it   Source of picture: freelancefolder.com     By John Richardson THIS poor mug might well have been the victim of rumours designed to move the daily price of polyethylene (PE) in China late last week. The author of this […]

Jump to page: