Sulphuric acid
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Saudi Arabia fosters closer ties with China; Aramco, Chinese firms sign fresh deals
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Energy giant Saudi Aramco has signed new agreements to advance separate expansion plans with Chinese petrochemical producers Rongsheng and Hengli. Signing conducted during China Premier Li’s state visit to Saudi Arabia Deals with the Chinese firms part of Aramco's downstream expansion Aramco moves closer to acquire 10% of Hengli Petrochemical Chinese Premier Li Qiang and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman on 11 September discussed cooperation in energy, investment, and trade, according to state news agency Saudi Press Agency (SPA). In a separate meeting with GCC secretary general Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi in Riyadh, Li called on China and Gulf Cooperation Countries (GCC) countries to align their development strategies and “speed up free trade agreement negotiations”, according to Chinese state media Xinhua. Li is in the Middle East on 10-13 September for state visits to Saudi Arabia and the UAE, both members of GCC. The four other members of GCC are Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman and Qatar. PLANS WITH RONGSHENG The new agreements follow a previously signed framework agreement with Rongsheng Petrochemical for a potential joint-venture expansion of Saudi Aramco Jubail Refinery Company (SASREF) facilities. SASREF operates a 305,000 barrel/day refinery complex in Al-Jubail, Saudi Arabia with downstream aromatics units that can produce 260,000 tonnes/year of toluene and 275,000 tonnes/year of benzene, according to the ICIS Supply and Demand Database. Aramco now owns 10% of Rongsheng Petrochemical, bought for $3.4 billion, with further plans between the two companies to take stakes in each other’s subsidiaries. Rongsheng Petrochemical manufactures and distributes a range of petrochemical and chemical fiber products, including purified terephthalic acid (PTA), polyester yarns, polyester filaments, and polyethylene terephthalate (PET). The Saudi oil giant intends to acquire 50% of Ningbo Zhongjin Petrochemical (ZJPC), which is fully owned by Rongsheng, with plans to upgrade existing assets and jointly develop a new materials project in Zhoushan. The proposed Chinese yuan (CNY) 67.5 billion Zhoushan new materials project would produce polyethylene (PE), propylene oxide (PO), styrene, ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA), polyolefin elastomer and bisphenol A (BPA). Rongsheng, in turn, would acquire a 50% stake in Aramco’s SASREF, which operates a refinery in Jubail. POTENTIAL DEALS WITH HENGLI With Hengli, talks have advanced relating to Aramco’s potential acquisition of a 10% stake in the Chinese group’s petrochemical arm, subject to due diligence and required regulatory clearances.’ The two companies had signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on the proposed transaction in in April 2024. Hengli Group operates across the entire production chain of oil refining, petrochemicals, polyester film, and textiles. It is one of the biggest PTA producers in China. "China is an important country in our global downstream growth strategy," Aramco downstream president Mohammed Al Qahtani said. "These agreements reflect our collective intention to elevate our relationships in vital sectors to advance our downstream objectives." Aramco is targeting a fourfold increase in its crude oil-to-chemicals conversion capacity to four million barrels/day by 2030. Focus article by Nurluqman Suratman Thumbnail image: Chinese Premier Li Qiang meets with Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud, and co-chairs the Fourth Meeting of the High-Level Chinese-Saudi Joint Committee with him at Riyadh's al-Yamamah Palace in Saudi Arabia on 11 September 2024.
12-Sep-2024
Europe top stories: weekly summary
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended 6 September. EU chemicals production gradually firming, short of recovery levels – Cefic Chemicals production in the EU has continued to firm through 2024, but weak demand is keeping output growth below recovery levels, with energy prices still substantially above US levels in the region, trade body Cefic said. Europe jet fuel prices hit new lows on supply overhang, crude softness Average European jet kerosene spot prices for cargoes fell 6% week-on-week while barge prices dropped 5% from the week prior as supply overhang and lack of demand continues to haunt the market. Europe markets slump on US, China demand worries, commodity shocks Europe chemicals shares and public markets slumped on Wednesday in the wake of sell-offs in Asia and the US on the back of growth fears and a crude oil sell-off. Europe August acetic acid contracts roll over Acetic acid contract pricing for August was assessed at a rollover in Europe amid balanced supply and seasonally low demand. Global spot index up on gains in NE Asia, NW Europe The global spot ICIS Petrochemical Index (IPEX) was up for the first time in four weeks in the week ending 30 August, on the back of increases in northeast Asia and northwest Europe.
09-Sep-2024
Europe top stories: weekly summary
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended 30 August. Europe OX post-summer restocking intentions unclear as weak demand lingers Restocking operations after the summer were once common practice in the European orthoxylene (OX) market, but this year could be different. BASF to shut down adipic acid production at Ludwigshafen next year BASF is to end production of adipic acid and several downstream units at Ludwigshafen, Germany, as part of structural changes underway at the site, the company said on Thursday. Rising costs, outages fail to rattle sluggish propylene oxide market in Europe Outages at domestic suppliers, a local unit being flagged for a potential sale and rising production costs have failed to rattle a sluggish European propylene oxide (PO) market. Europe August nylon 6,6 contract prices soften in a slow market European nylon 6,6 contract prices for August softened from July levels, posting highly varied monthly deltas. Global spot index slips on lower prices in northeast Asia, US Gulf The global spot ICIS Petrochemical Index (IPEX) slipped by nearly one-percentage point in the week ending 23 August, on the back of price falls in northeast Asia and the US Gulf.
02-Sep-2024
BASF to shut down adipic acid production at Ludwigshafen next year
LONDON (ICIS)–BASF is to end production of adipic acid and several downstream units at Ludwigshafen, Germany, as part of structural changes underway at the site, the company said on Thursday. Production of adipic acid will conclude at the site over the course of 2025, while units to manufacture cyclododecanone (CDon) and cyclopentanone (CPon), which utilize adipic acid as a raw material, will cease in the first half of the year. The company is planning to cut around €1 billion in costs from the site, with new CEO Markus Kamieth expected to fully set out what steps will be taken at the company’s capital markets day in September this year. The company had already cut back adipic acid production capacity at the site in 2023, but had kept a some capacity onstream to feed into those downstream units. BASF expects to cease deliveries of CDon and CPon, which are used in nylon 12 and pharmaceuticals production respectively, and is in talks with customers, the company added. It will continue to produce adipic acid in Onsan, South Korea, and Chalampe, France, BASF added. The decision was taken as part of the ongoing strategic review of site operations to “ensure competitiveness under changing market conditions”, the company said in a statement. Around 180 workers will be affected by the closures, with BASF planning to explore the possibility of employment positions elsewhere within the group. “These closures are part of the development of a long-term target picture for the transformation of the Ludwigshafen site,” said BASF industrial relations director Katja Schwarpwinkel. Thumbnail photo: BASF's Ludwigshafen, Germany production complex. Picture source: BASF Updates throughout
29-Aug-2024
BASF to shut down adipic acid production at Ludwigshafen next year
LONDON (ICIS)–BASF is to end production of adipic acid and several downstream units at Ludwigshafen, Germany, as part of structural changes underway at the site, the company said on Thursday. Production of adipic acid will conclude at the site over the course of 2025, while units to manufacture cyclododecanone (CDon) and cyclopentanone (CPon), which utilize adipic acid as a raw material, will cease in the first half of the year.
29-Aug-2024
Indian Oil's petrochemical capacity to more than triple by 2030
MUMBAI (ICIS)–Indian Oil Corp (IOC) plans to beef up its petrochemical production capacity to 14m tonnes/year by 2030 which will increase the state-owned company’s petrochemical intensity index (PII) to 15%, nearly triple its current level, company chair SM Vaidya said. Total petrochemical investments to reach Rs1.2 trillion Domestic industry projected to grow at 8-10% over the next few years Local demand estimated to hit $1 trillion by 2040 Petrochemical projects worth Indian rupees (Rs) 300 billion ($3.6 billion) are under various stages of implementation, while feasibility studies are ongoing on projects worth Rs900 billion, based on IOC’s annual report for the fiscal year ending March 2024. The company’s current petrochemical production capacity stands at 4.28 million tonnes/year, based on its annual report for the fiscal year ending March 2024. IOC’s PII refers to the percentage of crude oil that is directly converted into chemicals. “We are integrating petrochemicals into our refining operations," IOC chairman SM Vaidya said at the company’s annual general meeting on 9 August. "This oil-to-chemical approach will enrich our value chain, meet rising petrochemical demand, reduce import reliance, and insulate the bottom line from the impacts of oil price fluctuations," he said. By 2026, its refining capacity will have increased by more than 25% from the current 70.3 million tonnes/year to 87.9 million tonnes/year, Vaidya said at IOC’s annual general meeting on 9 August. By the end of the decade, IOC expects its refining capacity to be 107.4 million tonnes/year, according to the annual report released on 18 July. “In 2023-24, we successfully commissioned the first phase of naphtha cracker expansion and paraxylene-purified terephthalic acid (PX-PTA) revamp project in Panipat and an ethylene glycol plant at Paradip. These have propelled our PII to 6.1%,” Vaidya said. In November 2023, IOC increased the capacity at the naphtha cracker at its Panipat refinery complex from 857,000 tonnes/year to 947,000 tonnes/year. Following the PX-PTA revamp at its Panipat refinery, IOC has increased its PX production to 460,000 tonnes/year and PTA output to 700,000 tonnes/year, as per the company website. In March 2024, the company inaugurated its 357,000 tonne/year monoethylene glycol (MEG) project at its Paradip refinery complex. PETROCHEMICAL PROJECT PIPELINE Indian Oil plans to commission a 150,000 tonne/year butyl acrylate plant at its Gujarat refinery in the current financial year 2024-25. One of the company’s ambitious petrochemical projects include the mega complex at Paradip in eastern Odisha state, Vaidya said, noting that the Rs610 billion project is IOC’s “largest ever investment at a single location”. The petrochemical complex will include a world-scale 1.5 milion tonne/year naphtha cracker unit along with downstream process units for producing polypropylene (PP), high density polyethylene (HDPE), linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC). The Paradip petrochemical project is currently in implementation stage and the company expects to commission it by August 2029, IOC said in its annual report released on 18 July. As part of its future expansions, IOC expects to begin operations at the 200,000 tonne/year PP plant at its Barauni refinery and 500,000 tonne/year PP line at its Gujarat refinery before end-March 2026, based on the company’s annual report. IOC has also enhanced its lube oil base stocks (LOBS) capacity at its Haldia complex and is setting up new plants at its Gujarat and Panipat refineries, Vaidya said, adding, “we aim to increase the capacity from 730,000 tonnes/year to 1.5 million tonnes/year”. The company expects to commission the 60,000 tonnes/year polybutadiene rubber (PBR) plant at its Panipat refinery by March 2025 as per the annual report. These planned expansions by IOC will help meet the rising petrochemical demand in the country, IOC stated in its latest annual report. The domestic petrochemical industry is "poised for substantial growth, driven by India’s sturdy macro fundamentals, population expansion and presently low per capita polymer consumption," it said. India's overall petrochemical demand is projected to nearly triple by 2040, with the industry's value expected to reach the $1 trillion mark, said Indian minister for petroleum and natural gas Hardeep Singh Pur in a presentation at the Asia Petrochemical Industry Conference (APIC) in May 2023. Focus article by Priya Jestin ($1 = Rs83.91) Thumbnail image: An Indian Oil petrol pump in Kolkata, 17 January 2022. (By Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)
14-Aug-2024
Americas top stories: weekly summary
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from ICIS News from the week ended 9 August. Canada labor tribunal rules on rail strike, orders 13-day cooling-off period The Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) on Friday ruled that no rail activities need to be maintained in case of a strike or lockout at rail carriers Canadian National (CN) and Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC). Celanese lifts force majeure on acetic acid, VAM in western Hemisphere Celanese has lifted the force majeure it declared on acetic acid and vinyl acetate monomer (VAM) sold in the western Hemisphere, the US-based acetyls producer said on Thursday. INSIGHT: So far, recession is unlikely despite market turmoil Chemical companies are expecting a lacklustre second half of the year, but, so far, they will unlikely suffer through a recession, despite the spate of pessimistic economic data and the worst stock-market selloff in more than a year. Avient hikes guidance after strong Q2, sees restocking in packaging and consumer Avient has raised its 2024 guidance for adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) following stronger-than-expected Q2 results. US chem shares plunge for third day amid fears of hard landing Shares of US-listed chemical companies fell sharply for the third consecutive trading day on Monday amid growing concerns that the US economy could head towards a hard landing and enter a recession. US recession fears fan slide in global stocks US stocks were trading down around 3% mid-morning on Monday, with the major chemical companies posting double-digit falls on growing fears about a recession after the world’s largest economy reported weak economic data.
12-Aug-2024
Celanese lifts force majeure on acetic acid, VAM in western Hemisphere
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Celanese has lifted the force majeure it declared on acetic acid and vinyl acetate monomer (VAM) sold in the western Hemisphere, the US-based acetyls producer said on Thursday. Celanese had declared force majeure earlier in the year after two feedstock suppliers suffered from disruptions. During an earnings call, Celanese said the effect of the force majeure was limited because of soft overall demand amid a difficult macro-economic environment. Thumbnail shows adhesive, which is typically made with VAM. (Image by Shutterstock)
08-Aug-2024
Asia shares rebound after sharp losses, oil prices rise more than $1/barrel
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asian shares rebounded on Tuesday, staging a relief rally after historic losses the previous day, as fresh US economic data for July alleviated recession fears. Meanwhile, oil prices surged by over $1/barrel in early Asian trade, fueled by escalating concerns about the spreading conflict in the Middle East. Japanese Nikkei 225 index jumps 9.55% in early Asian trade Asian petrochemical shares follow regional market rebound, Asahi Kasei gains China's petrochemical futures continue decline In Europe the main stock markets stabilized, opening slightly up before falling back. The UK’s FTSE 100 was down 0.08% at 11:20 London time, while Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC 40 were 0.17% and 0.46% lower respectively. The stronger-than-expected US Institute for Supply Management (ISM) Services Survey for July helped ease growth worries. The overall services purchasing managers' index (PMI) improved to 51.4 in July, swinging into expansion and beating the consensus for a rise to 51.0 from 48.8 in June. A PMI reading above 50 indicates growth in the services sector. By 02:30 GMT, Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 was up 9.55%, South Korea's KOSPI was 3.07% higher and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose by 0.06%. Singapore's Straits Times Index (STI) was down by 0.96% while China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite Index inched 0.20% higher after shedding 1.54% on Monday. Asian petrochemical shares tracked the rebound in regional bourses, with Japanese major Asahi Kasei jumping nearly 14% and South Korean producer LG Chem up by 4.59%. China’s petrochemical futures, however, continued lower in early trade on Tuesday. At 10:30 local time (02:30 GMT), futures of petrochemical commodities, including plastics, methanol and glycols, were trading lower, after losing 0.4-2.1% in the previous session. Product Yuan (CNY)/tonne Change Linear low density polyethylene (LLDPE) 8,231 -0.3% Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) 5,650 -0.5% Ethylene glycol (EG) 4,590 -0.5% Polypropylene (PP) 7,570 -0.4% Styrene monomer (SM) 9,183 -0.2% Paraxylene * 8,120 -0.9% Purified terephthalic acid (PTA)* 5,644 -0.8% Methanol* 2,468 -0.5% Sources: Dalian Commodity Exchange, *Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange The global equity market sell-off intensified on Monday, with a wave of declines sweeping across major bourses worldwide. The rout began in Asia, where the Nikkei 225 index plummeted 12.4% day on day, marking its worst performance since 1987 while the KOSPI posted its steepest decline in its closing price to date. In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 2.2%, with all sectors and major indexes closing in negative territory. Utilities and oil and gas stocks suffered the steepest losses, leading the downturn in European markets. In the US, the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged by about 1,000 points or down 2.6%, the Nasdaq dived 3.4% and the S&P 500 slid 3.0%. This marked the largest losses since September 2022 for the Dow and S&P, following a downturn late last week due to poor US jobs data and weak manufacturing PMI, which sparked recession fears. The unwinding of the yen "carry trade" after the Bank of Japan raised interest rates last week also added fuel to the retreat in global markets. For now, the US Federal Reserve has no intention of delivering an emergency rate cut before the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting on 18 September, Singapore-based DBS Group Research said in a note on Tuesday. "The Fed wants markets to view the coming rate cuts as preserving the soft landing and supporting jobs, not as a delayed response to a weakening economy," it said. GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS BOOSTING OILOil prices rose by more than $1/barrel in early Asian trade on Tuesday after dipping in the previous session, driven by supply concerns amid escalating tensions in the Middle East. "Markets are still waiting to see how Iran responds to Israel after it vowed retaliation for the assassination of Hamas’ political leader on Iranian soil," Dutch banking and financial information services firm ING said in a note. "Oil has been unable to escape the broader risk-off move seen across assets, as concerns grow over the potential for a US recession following some weaker macro data in recent weeks. This only adds to worries over Chinese demand." Reports that the Sharara oilfield in Libya has completely stopped production due to protests at the site also supported oil prices. This oilfield has a production capacity of 300,000 barrels/day but was producing around 270,000 barrels/day prior to the disruption. Focus article by Nurluqman Suratman Additional reporting by Fanny Zhang Thumbnail photo shows a stock market indicator board (Source: BIANCA DE MARCHI/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock) Updates, adding Europe detail in fourth paragraph
06-Aug-2024
Asia shares rebound after sharp losses, oil prices rise more than $1/barrel
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asian shares rebounded on Tuesday, staging a relief rally after historic losses the previous day, as fresh US economic data for July alleviated recession fears. Meanwhile, oil prices surged by over $1/barrel in early Asian trade, fueled by escalating concerns about the spreading conflict in the Middle East. Japanese Nikkei 225 index jumps 9.55% in early Asian trade Asian petrochemical shares follow regional market rebound, Asahi Kasei gains China's petrochemical futures continue decline The stronger-than-expected US Institute for Supply Management (ISM) Services Survey for July helped ease growth worries. The overall services purchasing managers' index (PMI) improved to 51.4 in July, swinging into expansion and beating the consensus for a rise to 51.0 from 48.8 in June. A PMI reading above 50 indicates growth in the services sector. By 02:30 GMT, Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 was up 9.55%, South Korea's KOSPI was 3.07% higher and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose by 0.06%. Singapore's Straits Times Index (STI) was down by 0.96% while China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite Index inched 0.20% higher after shedding 1.54% on Monday. Asian petrochemical shares tracked the rebound in regional bourses, with Japanese major Asahi Kasei jumping nearly 14% and South Korean producer LG Chem up by 4.59%. China’s petrochemical futures, however, continued lower in early trade on Tuesday. At 10:30 local time (02:30 GMT), futures of petrochemical commodities, including plastics, methanol and glycols, were trading lower, after losing 0.4-2.1% in the previous session. Product Yuan (CNY)/tonne Change Linear low density polyethylene (LLDPE) 8,231 -0.3% Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) 5,650 -0.5% Ethylene glycol (EG) 4,590 -0.5% Polypropylene (PP) 7,570 -0.4% Styrene monomer (SM) 9,183 -0.2% Paraxylene * 8,120 -0.9% Purified terephthalic acid (PTA)* 5,644 -0.8% Methanol* 2,468 -0.5% Sources: Dalian Commodity Exchange, *Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange The global equity market sell-off intensified on Monday, with a wave of declines sweeping across major bourses worldwide. The rout began in Asia, where the Nikkei 225 index plummeted 12.4% day on day, marking its worst performance since 1987 while the KOSPI posted its steepest decline in its closing price to date. In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 2.2%, with all sectors and major indexes closing in negative territory. Utilities and oil and gas stocks suffered the steepest losses, leading the downturn in European markets. In the US, the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged by about 1,000 points or down 2.6%, the Nasdaq dived 3.4% and the S&P 500 slid 3.0%. This marked the largest losses since September 2022 for the Dow and S&P, following a downturn late last week due to poor US jobs data and weak manufacturing PMI, which sparked recession fears. The unwinding of the yen "carry trade" after the Bank of Japan raised interest rates last week also added fuel to the retreat in global markets. For now, the US Federal Reserve has no intention of delivering an emergency rate cut before the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting on 18 September, Singapore-based DBS Group Research said in a note on Tuesday. "The Fed wants markets to view the coming rate cuts as preserving the soft landing and supporting jobs, not as a delayed response to a weakening economy," it said. GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS BOOSTING OILOil prices rose by more than $1/barrel in early Asian trade on Tuesday after dipping in the previous session, driven by supply concerns amid escalating tensions in the Middle East. "Markets are still waiting to see how Iran responds to Israel after it vowed retaliation for the assassination of Hamas’ political leader on Iranian soil," Dutch banking and financial information services firm ING said in a note. "Oil has been unable to escape the broader risk-off move seen across assets, as concerns grow over the potential for a US recession following some weaker macro data in recent weeks. This only adds to worries over Chinese demand." Reports that the Sharara oilfield in Libya has completely stopped production due to protests at the site also supported oil prices. This oilfield has a production capacity of 300,000 barrels/day but was producing around 270,000 barrels/day prior to the disruption. Additional reporting by Fanny Zhang Thumbnail photo shows a stock market indicator board (Source: BIANCA DE MARCHI/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock) Focus article by Nurluqman Suratman
06-Aug-2024
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