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Ethylene16-May-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Dow’s operations in Terneuzen,
the Netherlands, and Tarragona, Spain, have
attractive costs for a region that is
struggling to remain competitive against other
parts of the world with cheaper energy, the CEO
said on Thursday.
Dow has crackers at both sites, and they can
use imported liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) as
feedstock to produce ethylene. The imports give
the crackers a cost advantage.
“Terneuzen and Tarragona are in great cost
positions, and both of those countries, the
Netherlands and Spain, have good energy
policies,” said Dow CEO Jim Fitterling. He
made his comments during an investor day
presentation.
“Going forward, I feel good about how they are
going to wind up, and we have good plans
there,” he said. “We have good line of site to
keep cost competitiveness.”
The company mentioned cracking more LPG at
Terneuzen to lower its costs.
Exports of LPG should increase from the US in
the next couple of years as midstream companies
complete terminal expansions. The US Gulf Coast
is running out of export capacity to handle
growing amounts of propane being produced in
the country.
EUROPE LACKS COST POSITION TO
EXPORTOther
companies are selling European businesses or
shutting down plants because of excess
global capacity and high costs.
Fitterling sees no signs that Europe is
considering any policies that could address
high energy costs.
“Europe is focused more on the stick, on carbon
emissions reductions,” he said. “They are not
focused at all on energy policy to drive down
energy costs. Energy costs are going to
continue to rise.”
Dow’s cost position does allow it to serve the
domestic market, but it is not in Europe to
export, Fitterling said. “Europe doesn’t have
the cost position any more to export.”
Dow will continue find ways to improve its cost
position at its European operations, he said.
But the company’s growth investments will be in
low-cost regions and in high value projects.
Ethylene16-May-2024
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Six years after the disaster
at Braskem’s rock salt mines in Brazil’s state
of Alagoas, the polymers major could continue
facing legal cases which could dent its cash
flow, according to analysts at US credit rating
agency Fitch.
Fitch downgraded the company’s credit rating in
December 2023 and placed it on what it called
‘Negative Watch’.
This week, following a very damning report
issued by Brazil’s Senate following a public
enquiry into the Alagoas disaster, the agency’s
analysts said that Braskem is likely to face
increase costs related to environmental,
social, and governance (ESG) challenges.
That would add, they said, to the expected poor
spreads for global petrochemicals in general,
which would be here to stay for at least the
remaining of 2024.
“Increased ESG risks and potential new claims
associated with the geological event in Alagoas
could worsen the company’s credit profile,”
said Marcelo Pappiani, a Fitch analyst covering
Braskem.
Fitch said Braskem has since 2019 disbursed
approximately Brazilian reais (R) 10.0 billion
($2.0 billion) on relocations, compensation,
the closure and monitoring of salt cavities,
and environment and other technical matters.
A spokesperson for Braskem said to ICIS on
Thursday the company would continue
collaborating with the authorities in their
enquiries about the Alagoas disaster but did
not comment on the specifics of the Senate’s
report.
“Braskem reiterates it was always willing to
collaborate with the public enquiry, promptly
collaborating providing all the information and
measures requested,” said the spokesperson.
“The company remains available to collaborate
with the authorities, as it has always been.”
NEVER-ENDING
DISASTERLate on Wednesday, the
Brazilian Senate published the final report
after its public enquiry into the Alagoas
disaster in 2018 which caused thousands to be
displaced from their homes in Maceio, the
capital’s state.
The report is to be voted by the Senate’s
plenary on 22 May.
Braskem’s rock salt mining caused the
displacement of the subsoil; the company used
the rock salt for production of caustic soda
and polyvinyl chloride (PVC), among others.
The 765-page report was highly damning for
Braskem, with vice president Marcelo Cerqueira
and other seven people accused of environmental
crimes as the company’s activities resulted in
the geological event.
Nearly 15,000 households had to be relocated,
and some of Maceio’s neighborhoods evacuated in
2018 remain ghost areas to this day.
The report was not only damning for Braskem but
also for Brazil’s authorities, especially the
National Mining Agency (ANM) as well as the
Ministry of Mines and Energy for failing to
implement the controls which are required.
THE GROUND KEEPS
MOVINGTo make matters worse for
Braskem, just last December there were further
movements in the subsoil which made residents
and authorities fear
another geological event, a prospect which
in the end did not materialize.
Those recent events, as well as this week’s
report, keep bringing back the Alagoas disaster
into the spotlight and seem set to keep
haunting the company for several quarters to
come, said the Fitch analysts.
“We believe the environmental and ecological
impacts of the salt mine collapse in the
context of sinking land in Alagoas could damage
Braskem’s financial position … Uncertainty
about current and upcoming lawsuits is high,
with negative outcomes potentially pressuring
cash flow and adversely impacting the company’s
financial results,” they said.
“The company could also face social impacts
from new claims and reparation costs to victims
and neighboring communities, in addition to the
14,446 families relocated to other areas.”
The Alagoas liabilities are casting such a long
shadow for Braskem that Abu Dhabi’s energy
major ADNOC, who seemed the strongest candidate
to acquire Novonor’s controlling stake in
Braskem, walked away earlier in
May, reportedly on the back of those
liabilities.
“We believe the prospect of Novonor selling its
stake in Braskem hit an impasse after the
December 2023 salt mine collapse, with ongoing
uncertainty regarding the repercussions of the
geological event,” said Fitch.
Neither the Senate report nor Fitch’s credit
rating warning seemed to dent investors’
interest on Braskem’s stock on Thursday though,
with shares trading nearly 1.45% higher on the
Sao Paulo stock exchange Bovespa by midday
local time.
Following ADNOC’s announcement it was throwing
the towel on Braskem, Braskem’s shares opened
the next trading session down more than 14%.
Gas16-May-2024
LONDON (ICIS)–ICIS hydrogen editor Jake Stones
meets with Hydrogen Europe CEO Jorgo
Chatzimarkakis to discuss some of the largest
developments to befall the EU hydrogen market
this year, namely the progression of the Net
Zero Industry Act, the new terms and conditions
for the second EU Hydrogen Bank auction, and
lastly the results of the pilot auction were
published to the market, indicating the first
projects to be granted a fixed subsidy via the
bank’s mechanism.
Over the episode Chatzimarkakis weighs in on
key considerations around these topics, such as
what the budget might be for the second
auction, how the criteria for the new auction
has changed compared to the first, and the
importance of the pilot auction’s results are
for the wider European hydrogen economy.
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Propylene16-May-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The ample supply of propylene
in Asia and new polypropylene (PP) capacities
in China are expected to weigh on discussions
in southeast Asia over the coming months.
Asia C3 to lengthen after PDH restarts in
China, SE Asia volumes
China PP exports to weigh on SE Asia
discussions
Asia PP prices to come under pressure in
June-July
In this podcast, ICIS editors Julia Tan, Jackie
Wong and Lucy Shuai discuss current trends in
Asia’s propylene and PP markets, and what we
can expect going forward.
Visit us at Booth 13 at the Grand Ballroom
Foyer at the Grand InterContinental Seoul
Parnas!
Book a meeting with ICIS
here.
Crude Oil16-May-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Japan’s economy shrank by
2.0% on an annualized basis in January-March
2024 as domestic consumption and capital
spending weakened.
Weak yen fuels inflation, hurts consumer
spending
Core inflation slows but remains above 2%
target
Japan central bank faces tough challenge of
balancing growth and inflation
The first-quarter reading reverses the 0.4%
year-on-year growth in October-December 2023.
On a quarter-on-quarter basis, Q1 GDP posted a
0.5% contraction, according to preliminary data
released by Japan’s Cabinet Office on Thursday.
Private consumption, which makes up more than
half of Japan’s economic growth, fell by 0.7%
in the first three months of 2024, marking the
fourth straight quarter of decline and
extending the 0.4% decline in the last three
months of last year.
Capital spending – a crucial component of
private demand – decreased by 0.8% in the first
quarter, reversing the 1.8% expansion in the
fourth quarter.
Net exports of goods and services fell by 0.3%
in the first quarter.
The sharp decline of the Japanese yen (Y) to
levels not seen since 1990 has raised concerns
about increasing living costs and depressed
consumer spending.
At 04:12 GMT, the yen was trading at around
Y154 to the US dollar, strengthening from the
recent record low of around Y159 in late April.
In March to April, the yen had continued to
weaken despite the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ)
decision to hike interest rates in March for
the first time in 17 years, ending eight years
of negative rates.
The central bank is expected to proceed
cautiously in tightening monetary policy due to
the fragile state of the economy.
Japan’s nationwide core consumer price index
(CPI), which excludes fresh food items but
includes energy items, rose by 2.6% year on
year, data from the BoJ showed on 14 May.
The number represented a deceleration from
February’s 2.8% print but remained well above
the central bank’s 2% target.
“The year-on-year rate of increase in the CPI
is likely to be in the range of 2.5-3.0% for
fiscal 2024 [year ending 31 March 2025] and
then be at around 2% for fiscal 2025 and 2026,”
Japan’s Ministry of Finance (MoF) said in a
report on 15 May.
Meanwhile, underlying consumer inflation, which
excludes temporary fluctuations, is expected to
increase gradually and then be at a level that
is generally consistent with the price
stability target of 2%, it said.
“If the BOJ also expects GDP to recover in
2Q24, then the BoJ’s focus should remain on
high inflation and the JPY [Japanese yen] as a
major contributor to high inflation,” Dutch
banking and financial information services
provider ING said in a note on Thursday.
“April inflation is expected to ease quite
sharply due to a high base last year, but
pipeline inflation indicates upward
inflationary pressures building for the coming
months,” it said.
“We believe that the BoJ is ready to act in
July, as it confirms that strong wage growth is
boosting household spending,” it added.
Japan’s economy is likely to keep growing at a
pace above its potential growth rate, with
overseas economies growing moderately, as well
as financial conditions being accommodative,
the finance ministry said in its 15 May report.
Focus article by Nurluqman
Suratman
Isocyanates15-May-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–US builder confidence in the
market for newly built single-family homes fell
sharply in May as higher mortgage rates
“hammer” confidence, the National Association
of Home Builders said on Wednesday.
Mortgage rates averaged above 7% for the past
four weeks as a lack of progress on reducing
inflation pushed
long-term interest rates higher, NAHB said.
The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI)
fell by six points from April to 45 in May –
its first decline since November 2023.
HMI readings below the 50 neutral mark indicate
that builders are pessimistic, readings above
50 that they are optimistic.
The high mortgage rates have pushed many
potential buyers back to the sidelines and the
market has slowed, NAHB said.
Another worry are new code rules that require
the US Department of Housing and Urban
Development and the US Department of
Agriculture to insure mortgages for new
single-family homes only if they are built to
the 2021
International Energy Conservation Code.
This would further increase the cost of
construction in a market “that sorely needs
more inventory for first-time and
first-generation buyers”, said NAHB chairman
Carl Harris.
NAHB chief economist Robert Dietz added: “The
last leg in the inflation fight is to reduce
shelter inflation, and this can only occur if
builders are able to construct more attainable,
affordable housing.”
The housing market is a key consumer of
chemicals, driving demand for a wide variety of
chemicals, resins and derivative products, such
as plastic pipe, insulation, paints and
coatings, adhesives and synthetic fibers, among
many others.
Please also visit the ICIS
construction topic page and
Macroeconomics: Impact on Chemicals.
Thumbnail photo source: NAHB
Acrylic acid15-May-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asian oxo-alcohols buyers
maintained a wait and watch approach, amid the
possibility of added plant capacities in China
weighing on market sentiment.
The acrylonitrile (ACN) market continues to see
limited spot demand in the northeast Asia
market. Even as downstream
acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) has seen
higher production rates recently, ACN producers
were unlikely to increase operating rates.
For the acrylates downstream, butyl-A market in
Asia continues to take direction from Chinese
domestic prices. With India’s Bureau of Indian
Standards (BIS) requirements preventing Chinese
origin imports, cargoes from China were flowing
into SE Asia and NE Asia.
In this podcast, ICIS editors Julia Tan and
Corey Chew discuss trends in the Asia propylene
and derivatives markets.
Visit ICIS during APIC ’24 on 30-31 May at
Booth 13 in the Grand Ballroom Foyer in the
Grand InterContinental Seoul Parnas.
Book a meeting with ICIS
here.
Gas15-May-2024
LONDON (ICIS)–The International Energy Agency
(IEA) on Wednesday cut its expectations for
global crude oil demand growth as demand from
the OECD shifted into contraction territory in
Q1 and as refinery margins continued to slump
into the spring period.
Demand slows on global economic health
concerns
Refinery margins near two-year lows
More balanced supply-demand expected in
2025
The IEA now expects global crude demand to slip
to 1.1 million barrels/day this year, down from
projections of 1.2 million barrels/day in its
previous monthly oil
forecast, and a further decline from the 1.3
million barrels/day projected in March.
The upward revisions seen in February and March
were driven by higher demand expectations on
the back of improved economic momentum,
particularly for the US, with the agency
predicting that the market could move into
supply deficit.
Weaker-than-expected deliveries to OECD
countries, particularly in Europe, drove demand
from the bloc into the negative in Q1,
according to the IEA, while pricing fell
through the early spring as economic concerns
outpaced the upward impact of geopolitical
tensions.
Crude futures have fallen from over $90/barrel
earlier in the year to $82.53 at midday Brent
trading on Wednesday.
Refinery margins have also fallen to near a
two-year low in the wake of a sell-off across
many crude and downstream markets such as
middle distillates.
Particularly pronounced in Europe, the slump in
refinery margins could lead to run rate cuts
that undermine the usual seasonal output
uptick, the IEA added.
“The slump in European refinery margins in
April outpaced those seen in the US Gulf Coast
and Singapore, reflecting its heavy reliance on
diesel output and weak regional demand eroding
the premium needed to attract long-haul imports
from East of Suez,” the IEA said in its monthly
report.
European gasoil demand dropped 140,000
barrels/day year on year in the opening three
months of the year, following a 210,000
barrel/day decline in Q4 2023.
Despite declining demand expectations for 2024,
supply growth is expected to be subdued, with a
1.4 million barrel/day increase in non-OPEC+
output offset by a projected 840,000 barrel/day
decline in OPEC+ output, amounting to a total
increase of 580,000 barrel/day.
The latest deliberations among OPEC member
states and allied country ministers is expected
at the start of June in Vienna, Austria, with
decisions taken there potentially setting the
tone for the second half of the year.
“Despite the recent weakness, our current
balances show the call on OPEC+ crude oil at
around 42 million barrels/day in the second
half of this year – roughly 700,000 barrels/day
above its April output,” the IEA added.
The agency projects that crude demand growth
will rise modestly to 1.2 million barrels/day,
but production is likely to reach 1.8 million
barrels/day, with 1.4 million of that total
expected from non-OPEC+ countries.
“Even if OPEC+ voluntary production cuts were
to stay in place, global oil supply could jump
by 1.8 million barrels/day compared with this
year’s more modest 580,000 barrels/day annual
increase,” the IEA said.
“The United States, Guyana, Canada and Brazil
continue to dominate gains, even as the pace of
the US supply expansion decelerates,” the IEA
added.
Focus article by Tom Brown.
Thumbnail photo: A crude oil tanker moored
off the coast of Cyprus (Source: Danil
Shamkin/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)
Ammonia15-May-2024
LONDON (ICIS)–Phosphates prices have been
under pressure in India recently, while demand
is expected to revive soon. Meanwhile, a lack
of ammonia spot demand globally is weighing on
the market.
Phosphates editor Chris Vlachopoulos talks to
senior editor Sylvia Traganida about the state
of the phosphates market ahead of the
International Fertilizer Association (IFA)
annual conference (20-22 May).
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