Americas top stories: weekly summary
ICIS Editorial
19-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from ICIS News from the week ended 16 May.
China, US agree to lower tariffs by
14 May for 90 days
The US and China have agreed to de-escalate
trade war with sharp cuts on tariffs by 14
May 2025, for an initial period of three
months, according to a joint statement issued
on Monday by the world’s two biggest
economies.
US chem shares surge on tariff
pause
US-listed shares of chemical companies surged
on Monday after the US and China agreed to a
90-day pause on the tariffs they imposed on
each other since 2 April.
INSIGHT: US-China 90-day pause a huge
relief for US chemicals, to catalyze
strategic rethinking
The US-China agreement to substantially take
down tariffs during a 90-day pause while
negotiations on a trade deal resume is a big
relief for US chemicals and plastics
producers, especially those with meaningful
exports to China.
Canada’s Alberta province freezes
industrial carbon price, cites US
tariffs
The government of Canada’s oil-rich Alberta
is freezing the province’s industrial carbon
price at Canadian dollar (C$) 95/tonne
($68/tonne).
INSIGHT: US propane poised for China
return on sharp cuts in bilateral
tariffs
High-level trade talks between the US and
China on 12 May have yielded significant
reduction in the level of newly imposed
tariffs by both sides, boding well for
operating rates at Chinese propane
dehydrogenation (PDH) plants.
INSIGHT: Brazil’s Lula visit to China
bears fruit with multi-billion
deals
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
had already got several investment deals in
the bag midway through his five-day state
visit to China – among others, Envision Group
has committed $1.0 billion in Latin America’s
largest economy to produce sugarcane-based
sustainable aviation fuel (SAF).
Saudi Aramco, US companies sign deals
worth $90 billion
Saudi energy and chemical giant Saudi Aramco
has signed 34 Memoranda of Understanding
(MoUs) and agreements potentially worth about
$90 billion in total, with major US
companies.
INSIGHT: US auto, metal tariffs
persist, threaten chem
demand
The tariff deal that the US has reached with
China did not eliminate the duties on steel,
aluminium and auto parts, all of which could
lower automobile production and reduce demand
for the plastics and chemicals used to make
the vehicles.
Texas firms expect partial but swift
pass through of tariff
costs
Businesses in the chemical-heavy US state of
Texas expect a partial but swift pass through
of the costs they expect to bear from the
nation’s tariffs, the Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas said on Friday.
Global News + ICIS Chemical Business (ICB)
See the full picture, with unlimited access to ICIS chemicals news across all markets and regions, plus ICB, the industry-leading magazine for the chemicals industry.
Contact us
Partnering with ICIS unlocks a vision of a future you can trust and achieve. We leverage our unrivalled network of industry experts to deliver a comprehensive market view based on independent and reliable data, insight and analytics.
Contact us to learn how we can support you as you transact today and plan for tomorrow.
READ MORE
