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Chemicals news

Japan's Mitsubishi Motors to invest $121 million in the Philippines

SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Japanese carmaker Mitsubishi Motors Corp (MMC) is set to invest Peso (Ps) 7 billion ($121 million) in the Philippines over the next five years. MMC president and CEO Takao Kato announced the plan during a meeting with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr on 6 February. The plan includes adding a new production model at the Mitsubishi Motors Philippines Corp (MMPC) plant in Laguna province, according to a statement issued by the Presidential Communications Office (PCO). Kato said the Philippines is MMC’s most important investment in southeast Asia, citing its good and stable economy. MMPC operates a manufacturing plant in Santa Rosa, Laguna, with an annual production capacity of 50,000 units, which can be doubled, it stated. As of November last year, MMPC had a 19% share of the domestic market, trailing behind Toyota's 46% share. Marcos also announced that MMC will be part of the government's Revitalizing the Automotive Industry for Competitiveness Enhancement (RACE) program which aims to boost the competitiveness of the local automotive industry. “In the ASEAN, (the) Philippines is our number one market,” MMC’s Kato said. Within southeast Asia, MMC also has production facilities in Thailand, Indonesia and Vietnam. The Japanese carmaker also has manufacturing plants in China and Russia. The automotive industry is a major global consumer of petrochemicals that contributes more than one-third of the raw material costs of an average vehicle. The sector drives demand for chemicals such as polypropylene (PP), along with nylon, polystyrene (PS), styrene butadiene rubber (SBR), polyurethane (PU), methyl methacrylate (MMA) and polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA). ($1 = Ps58)

07-Feb-2025

INSIGHT: South Korea broadens aid for struggling petrochemical industry

SINGAPORE (ICIS)–South Korea is streamlining regulations to make it easier for regions densely populated by petrochemical companies to qualify as "industrial crisis response areas", a designation that unlocks government support and financial assistance to mitigate impact of market downturns. Yeosu, Ulsan, Daesan petrochemical hubs to benefit Focus shifts to manufacturing for crisis designation Voluntary business restructuring encouraged This designation also unlocks access to tailored assistance in areas like employment stability, R&D, commercialization, market access, and consulting, according to a Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE) administrative notice released on 5 February. The new regulation follows a wide-ranging support package unveiled by the government on 23 December 2024, aimed at bolstering the competitiveness of its domestic petrochemical industry, which is facing a global oversupply driven by expansions in China and the Middle East. This policy shift is expected to benefit major petrochemical hubs such as Yeosu, Ulsan, and Daesan, providing them with greater access to resources designed to mitigate economic downturns and to support continued growth within the sector. Previously, the high proportion of the services sector in cities like Yeosu hindered their ability to be designated as industrial crisis response areas. The revised regulations will now assess "regional stagnation" based solely on the manufacturing sector, excluding service industries. This change will allow regions heavily reliant on manufacturing, particularly petrochemicals, to meet the designation criteria more readily. MULTI-PRONGED STRATEGY A cornerstone of the government's latest plan is encouraging voluntary business restructuring, encompassing facility closures, sales, joint ventures, efficiency improvements, and new business acquisitions. To facilitate these changes, the government will implement legal reforms and offer a range of financial and tax incentives. These include extending the grace period for acquiring 100% of holding company shares from three to five years and streamlining merger reviews with the Korean Fair Trade Commission (FTC), the country's regulatory authority for economic competition. A dedicated consultation channel between MOTIE and the FTC will further expedite reviews and support restructuring efforts. Separately, the government plans to provide up to Korean won (W) 3 trillion ($2.1 billion) in financing packages for petrochemical companies seeking to revamp their business portfolios, including expanded access to a W1 trillion business restructuring fund managed by the Korea Development Bank. For designated Industrial Crisis Response Areas, existing loan maturities from policy financial institutions will be extended, principal repayments deferred; national tax payment deadlines extended; and seizure and sale deferred for up to one year. Beyond restructuring, the government is targeting cost reduction. The duty-free period for crude oil used in naphtha production will be extended by a year until the end of 2025 and import surcharges on liquefied natural gas (LNG) used as industrial raw materials will be refunded. A "fast-track" approval process will be implemented for ethane terminal and storage tank construction to facilitate access to cheaper raw materials. Additional cost-saving measures include expanding electricity rate options through distributed power trading and rationalizing safety regulations. The plan will also support R&D focused on shifting production from general-purpose petrochemicals to specialized, high-value-added products. An "R&D Investment Roadmap for 2025-2030" will be unveiled in the first half of this year, and preliminary feasibility studies for high-value and eco-friendly chemical material technology development will be conducted. The support ratio for regional investment subsidies in Industrial Crisis Response Areas will be increased, national strategic and new growth technologies will be identified, and a W50 billion "High-Value Specialty Fund" will be established to promote production of specialty chemicals. DOMESTIC PRODUCERS STRUGGLE South Korea's four largest petrochemical manufacturers – LG Chem, Lotte Chemical, Kumho Petrochemical and Hanwha Solutions – faced continued challenges in 2024. LG Chem reported a net loss of W899.2 billion in the fourth quarter, reversing the net profit of W128.5 billion a year ago due to decreased demand for both petrochemicals and battery materials. It also reported an operating loss of W252 billion in the same period. The company has revised down its capital expenditure plan for the year to W2 trillion-3 trillion from W4 trillion previously as it navigates the market downturn. Separately, as part of its global expansion strategy, LG Chem has secured a deal to supply cathode materials to Prime Planet Energy and Solutions (PPES) – a joint venture of Japanese carmaker Toyota and appliance maker Panasonic – starting 2026. The company will focus on developing eco-friendly materials and technologies that align with PPES' low-carbon vision. Meanwhile, major ethylene producer Lotte Chemical in Q3 2024 reported a loss of W514 billion, on "delayed demand recovery, lower product spreads due to currency depreciation, one-time costs from maintenance at overseas subsidiaries, and rising shipping costs". The company is now pursuing an asset-light strategy, which involved liquidation of its Malaysian synthetic rubber production subsidiary Lotte Ube Synthetic Rubber (LUSR) – a joint venture with Japan’s Ube Elastomer. Based in Johor, Malaysia, LUSR produces 50,000 tonnes/year of polybutadiene rubber (PBR). Lotte Chemical also plans to generate W1.4 trillion in proceeds from sale of stakes in overseas subsidiaries. Synthetic rubber major Kumho Petrochemical Co reported on 4 February a Q4 net income of W61.3 billion, down 33% year on year, due to weak market demand due to a year-end drop in raw material prices; with operating profit shrinking by about 72% to W10 billion despite a 19% increase in sales to W1.8 trillion. Insight article by Nurluqman Suratman ($1 = W1,446) Thumbnail image shows an aerial view of a container pier in South Korea's southeastern port city of Busan. (YONHAP/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

07-Feb-2025

Eurozone, EU chem producer prices flat in December 2024 from previous month

LONDON (ICIS)–Chemicals producer prices in the eurozone and EU were flat in December from the previous month, official data showed on Thursday. Spain (-0.2%), Italy (-0.2%), the Netherlands (-0.5%) and Poland (-0.1%) all posted declines while Germany, Europe’s biggest chemicals producer, recorded zero price growth. France (+0.2%) was the only major EU country to report a rise in chemicals producer prices. General industrial producer prices in December rose by 0.4% month on month in both the eurozone and EU, statistics agency Eurostat said in a first estimate that is subject to revision. The annual industrial producer price average for the whole of 2024 fell by 4.2% in the eurozone and by 4.0% in the EU from 2023.

06-Feb-2025

Polystyrene foam ban comes into effect in Oregon, US

HOUSTON (ICIS)–Senate Bill 543 was passed in 2023, but it was not until 1 January 2025 that the ban on polystyrene foam was implemented. According to The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), “[The] 2023 Senate Bill 543 (ORS 459.465 to 459.477) prohibits food vendors from using polystyrene foam containers for prepared food, prohibits the sale of polystyrene foam containers or polystyrene foam packing peanuts, and prohibits the sale of foodware containers with added perfluoroalkyl or polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)." “PFAS are a group of chemicals that are considered “emerging environmental contaminants” because public knowledge about their harmful effects and how they are regulated are relatively new or undeveloped. PFAS are water soluble and highly mobile, and can accumulate in living organisms. Many newer PFAS transform into highly persistent perfluorinated chemicals in the environment, and can last for hundreds to thousands of years, depending on the PFAS compound,” according to The Oregon DEQ. What does this mean for polystyrene in Oregon? Well, the bill states that food vendors must not use polystyrene foam containers when selling, offering for sale, serving or dispensing prepared food to a consumer. Examples of this include to-go containers that many use to take home leftovers or to pick up food-orders. This also applies to polystyrene foam plates and cups. Although food vendors must not use polystyrene foam, the bill also states that a person may not sell, offer for sale or distribute in or into the state polystyrene foam containers or polystyrene foam packaging peanuts. Also, a person may not sell, offer for sale or distribute in or into the state a foodware container containing intentionally-added PFAS. The Oregon DEQ noted that businesses with existing inventory of the examples above may not use or sell the material after 1 January 2025.

05-Feb-2025

PODCAST: Look ahead to ICIS PET Value Chain Conference

LONDON (ICIS)–Senior editor, recycling Matt Tudball talks to Helen McGeough, global recycling analytics team lead about some of the key topics that will be discussed at the upcoming ICIS PET Value Chain Conference on 6-7 March in Amsterdam. Topics include: Improving the supply chain for recycled PET Getting access to good-quality feedstocks Deposit return schemes (DRS) growing in Europe Impact of high feedstocks on R-PET prices Spreads between virgin PET and R-PET

05-Feb-2025

Brazil chemicals deficit hits $49 billion in 2024 despite higher tariffs by year-end

SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Brazil's chemical industry posted a $48.7 billion trade deficit in 2024 as imports surged to $63.9 billion, driven by “predatory pricing” from US and Asian suppliers, the country’s chemicals trade group Abiquim said. Asian suppliers, moreover, benefited from discounted Russian raw materials and, in China’s case, from heavy subsidies from the state, the trade group added. The overall deficit, while substantial, remained below the 2022 record of $63 billion, though Abiquim noted this was primarily due what it described as “predatory import pricing” which cushioned the “real imbalance” in the trade balance." Import volumes rose 11.5% to 65.3 million tonnes of chemicals, with fertilizer intermediates accounting for 41.1 million tonnes, up 7.4% from 2023. This marked the highest import volume since records began in 1989, as Asian suppliers leveraged cheaper Russian materials amid the war in Ukraine. Abiquim’s CEO said 2024 had been challenging for Brazil’s chemicals producers, although the year was also marked by the higher import tariffs approved for 30 chemical products, which gave the sector a boost in November and December, said Andre Passos. Following October's tariff implementation, domestic production rose 6.35% in the final two months, he added. The trade group’s CEO said higher tariffs were a welcome step but much more needed to be done to protect Brazil’s chemicals producers’ operations and their transition to the green economy. “We know that this [higher tariffs] is just the first step and it is essential to keep facing up to the extremely adverse international scenario, with excess production capacity for chemical products in the world and heavy subsidy programs in the world’s main chemical producers,” said Passos. “We are crossing the gateway to the low-carbon economy and the chemical industry is ready to lead this transition. Low-carbon chemistry is related to the use of technologies that reduce or neutralize greenhouse gas emissions. “Renewable chemistry, carbon capture and storage, and chemical recycling are some examples of this leadership that can be exercised by the Brazilian chemical industry,” he concluded. ASIA DOMINATES Asian suppliers, excluding the Middle East, dominated imports with a 31% share worth $19.6 billion, creating an $18 billion regional trade gap. The deficit with Asia has steadily worsened from $10bn in 2020 to $16.2bn in 2023, said Abiquim, reflecting China’s overcapacities and the country’s switch from net importer to next exporter for most chemicals. Domestic manufacturers faced increased competition across all segments, with imports of resins and elastomers jumping 32.4%, organic chemicals 14.3%, inorganics 9.1%, and other industrial chemicals 9.3%. Import prices averaged 6.3% lower than 2023, leading to domestic plant closures, said Abiquim. Brazilian chemical exports rose 4.3% to $15.2 billion, though volumes dipped 0.2%. The sector maintained its position as the country's third-largest manufacturing exporter, behind food products at $66.5 billion and base metals at $23.2 billion, said Abiquim.

05-Feb-2025

Japan's Asahi Kasei 9-month income surges; basic materials swing to profit

SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asahi Kasei's net income surged by 68.1% year on year in the nine months to December 2024, supported by improved petrochemical prices and lower fixed costs, the Japanese chemicals major said on Wednesday. in Japanese yen (Y) billions Apr-Dec 2024 Apr-Dec 2023 % Change Sales 2,259.3 2,064.1 9.5 Operating income 164.4 98.5 66.9 EBITDA 299.8 233.4 28.4 Net income 98.5 58.6 68.1 Basic Materials (Core Petrochemicals) Business in Japanese yen (Y) billions Apr-Dec 2024 Apr-Dec 2023 % Change Sales 241.7 219.2 10.3 Operating income 12 -8.4  – The company's basic materials unit swung to an operating profit of Y12 billion ($78.2 millon) in April-December 2024 on the back of higher sales revenues, the company said in a statement. Asahi Kasei has revised its year to March 2025 forecasts for sales and operating income reflect an seasonal dip in demand and increased fixed costs in the final quarter of the fiscal year. Overall sales are now expected to reach Y3.04 trillion, a 9.3% increase from the previous fiscal year. However, this new projection represents a 0.9% decrease from the company's November estimate. Full-year operating income is now projected to reach Y200 billion, up 42.1% from actual 2023 figures, and up by 2.6% from the company’s previous forecast. Asahi Kasei expects its net income for the full year to surge to ¥110 billion, more than double the ¥43.8 billion recorded in the previous fiscal year. The company aims continue to "advance its business portfolio transformation; accelerating studies on structural transformation of petrochemical chain-related businesses centered on basic materials while advancing investment in growth businesses", it added. In January this year, Asahi Kasei ceased operations at its Thailand-based joint venture PTT Asahi Chemical. ($1 = Y153.43) Thumbnail image: At a port in Tokyo, Japan 9 December 2024. (FRANCK ROBICHON/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

05-Feb-2025

Brazil’s Unigel appoints Dario Gaeta as CEO after debt restructuring greenlit

SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Brazilian chemicals producer Unigel has concluded its debt restructuring process worth Brazilian reais (R) 5.1 billion ($885 million) after a Sao Paulo business court greenlit the plans drawn up by creditors. Unigel said it would be able to deleverage its debts by around 50% with the restructuring process’ conversion of R5.1 billion of existing debt into new financial instruments. The restructuring puts an end to the decades-long private ownership of Unigel in the hands of its founder, 88-year-old Henri Armand Szlezynger. “The execution of the RE [restructuring] Plan marks a pivotal transition in Unigel’s governance framework, with Option A [main] Creditors now holding a 50% stake in the company’s equity structure,” said Unigel. The new majority owners headhunted for the CEO position the Brazilian executive Dario Gaeta, with decades of experience at industrial and agricultural companies. Up to 2024, he was chief operating officer at ethanol producer Atvos and, prior to that, he was the CEO at Tiete Agroindustrial, another company in the sugar and ethanol sector, according to Gaeta’s LinkedIn profile. Former CEO Roberto Noronha has been demoted to board member, and the vice president who has overseen the restructuring, Daniel Zilberknop, an old name in Unigel, has been appointed chairman of the board. Unigel’s new board composition Position Name Representative Chairman of the Board Daniel Zilberknop Independent CEO Dario Gaeta Not provided Board Member Marc Buckingham Szlezynger Cigel Board Member Roberto Noronha Santos Cigel Board Member Pedro Wongtschowski Cigel Board Member Fabio de Barros Pinheiro Creditors Board Member Kofi William Bentsi-Enchill Creditors Board Member Gregorio Mario Charnas Creditors The restructuring plan also signals an exit from the fertilizers sector, as already outlined at the beginning of the restructuring process by creditors. High prices for natural gas – fertilizers’ main feedstock – was the main cause for that part of the business to start faltering, dragging the rest behind it in the end. Some plants which were leased to Unigel by Brazil’s state-owned energy major Petrobras are reportedly on course to return under Petrobras’ umbrella, even if Unigel may continue operating them. Unigel, then, is to remain mostly what it was before it ventured into fertilizers and was caught up in a major sector downturn. The company mostly produces styrenics and acrylics. For products and capacities, see bottom table. SULPHURIC ACID PLANTEarlier in January, Unigel presented plans to finish construction of its sulphuric acid plant in the state of Bahia, which had been paused as the company's financial woes increased. Unigel said it would invest $36.8 million to finish up the plant in Camacari, aiming to start it up by September. Production capacities were not disclosed. When fully functioning, the plant will allow Unigel to reduce its acid purchases in the open market. Acid is a key chemical used in many other chemical and industrial processes. Jonathan Szwarc, head of Latin America credit research at data firm specializing in leveraged capital markets Debtwire, who covered Unigel in the past, said by reducing its dependency on imports the sulphuric acid plant was a sound project from which Unigel’s could start building up its recovery. “The numbers for that project are sound. From my time covering Unigel, I remember the return on investment was expected to be very healthy: in up to four years, the company expects to have paid off the investment, such are the large amounts of acid it has to purchase in the open market,” said Szwarc. Earlier this month, Unigel also presented, for the first time in several quarters, a financial forecast for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) up to 2030. The company has not published any financial results since 2023, a provision contemplated under Brazilian corporate law for companies in financial distress. For 2025, Unigel said it expected upsides coming from a 5% increase in Brazil’s styrene import tariff ($4 million positive contribution) and a higher rate in the REIQ tax benefit system for chemicals companies ($14 million). According to Unigel, its EBITDA could rise to $182 million by 2030. Unigel forecasts 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 EBITDA (in $ million) 49 142 164 176 173 182 Whether Unigel’s medium-term forecasts are realized remains to the seen, as it ultimately is a company in very deep financial distress for the past year and a half, operating in a market – petrochemicals – which is going through one of the longest sector’s downturns. “2030 is indeed quite a long forecast on this occasion. But, of course, for a judge to approve your restructuring plan you must present some sort of credible plan: detailed forecasts on financials, on spreads, on production…” said Szwarc. “Whether those forecasts end up realized, that’s another matter. But as we say in this world – an Excel [spreadsheet] can withstand almost anything,” he concluded, ironically. ($1 = R5.76) Additional information by Yashas Mudumbai Focus article by Jonathan Lopez 

04-Feb-2025

PODCAST: Trump 2.0 trade war will destabilise chemical value chains, boost reshoring

BARCELONA (ICIS)–As US president Donald Trump revives his trade war, business leaders may seek certainty by switching to local and regional supply chains. Businesses need stability, certainty to make investment decisions Trade war could drive more national/regional industrial and chemical supply chains But reshoring can be very expensive and time-consuming New technologies such as 3-D printing and AI support local production Export-dependent US chemicals have a lot to lose from a trade war US exported more than 10 million tonnes of polyethylene (PE) to Europe in 2023 In this Think Tank podcast, Will Beacham interviews Nigel Davis from the ICIS market development team and Paul Hodges, chairman of New Normal Consulting. Editor’s note: This podcast is an opinion piece. The views expressed are those of the presenter and interviewees, and do not necessarily represent those of ICIS. ICIS is organising regular updates to help the industry understand current market trends. Register here . Read the latest issue of ICIS Chemical Business. Read Paul Hodges and John Richardson's ICIS blogs.

04-Feb-2025

Japan's Sumitomo Chemical cuts stake in Sumitomo Bakelite

SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Japan's Sumitomo Chemical has sold a portion of its stake in specialty chemicals producer Sumitomo Bakelite as part of a broader plan to enhance its financial performance through asset sales. Sumitomo Chemical on 4 February said that it has sold around 5.25 million shares of Sumitomo Bakelite for around yen (Y) 19.1 billion ($123 million), the Japanese producer said on Tuesday. Sumitomo Bakelite produces a range of chemical products, including phenolic, epoxy and polyimide resins, as well as other specialty chemicals. The stake sale reduced Sumitomo Chemical’s stake in the specialty chemicals producer to 10.6% from 15.6% previously. Sumitomo Chemical expects a one-time gain of around Y17.7 billion from the sale in its non-consolidated financial results for the year ending 31 March 2025. "Sumitomo Chemical is implementing its short-term intensive performance improvement measures aimed at ensuring a V-shaped recovery in fiscal 2024 and strengthening its financial position to lay the groundwork for future fundamental structural reforms," the company said. On 3 February, the company announced that it will be divesting 66.6% of its share in wholly-owned subsidiary Sumitomo Chemical Engineering Co (SCEC) by 31 March to Japan's JFE Engineering Corp for an undisclosed fee. Sumitomo Chemical will retain a 33.4% stake in SCEC following the sale. "SCEC will maintain a good relationship with the Sumitomo Chemical Group as it works to maximize its synergies with the JFE Group," the company said. SCEC provides engineering, procurement, construction, operation and maintenance services for environmental facilities, energy facilities, including liquified natural gas stations and renewable energy plants, as well as chemical plants. In the nine months to 31 December 2024, Sumitomo Chemical swung into a net profit on improved selling prices at its core essential and green materials segment, the Japanese producer said on 3 February. in Japanese yen (Y) billions Apr-Dec 2024 Apr-Dec 2023 % Change Sales 1,904.8 1,806.9 5.4 Operating income 145.4 -160.6 Net income 28.6 -109.8 The company's selling prices for synthetic resins, methyl methacrylate, and industrial chemicals rose due to higher raw material costs during the period. However, aluminum shipments declined following the group's exit from the business, resulting in a ¥8.8 billion decrease in essential and green materials sales revenue to Y672.9 billion. Despite this, the segment trimmed its core operating loss by Y16.2 billion to Y44.3 billion, aided by better market conditions, although the financial performance of its 37.5%-owned Saudi chemical producer Petro Rabigh deteriorated. Saudi Aramco owns 62.5% of Petro Rabigh. MANAGEMENT CHANGES Sumitomo Chemical on 3 February announced that Nobuaki Mito, the company's senior managing executive officer, will take over as the company's new president. Mito is expected to be inaugurated as representative director and president of Sumitomo Chemical in June this year, while incumbent president, Keiichi Iwata, will become chairman. ($1 = Y155.20)

04-Feb-2025

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