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Crude Oil24-Jul-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–South Korea’s economy grew by
0.5% year on year in the second quarter,
avoiding a technical recession, the central
bank’s data showed on Thursday.
Exports, imports grow as South Korea’s
economy recovers slightly
Race to negotiate lower tariffs hit snag
with cancelled US talks
GDP growth forecast could be 0.7% if
tariffs remain – AMRO
On a seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter
basis, GDP rose by 0.6% between April-June
2025, the Bank of Korea (BOK) said in a
statement.
Exports improved by 4.2% year on year on
increased semiconductors, petroleum products
and chemical product shipments, while imports
were up 3.8% on an increase in energy items,
such as crude oil and natural gas.
South Korea is a major importer of raw
materials like crude oil and naphtha, which it
uses to produce a variety of petrochemicals,
which are then exported. The country is a major
exporter of aromatics such as benzene, toluene
and styrene.
Private consumption, accounting for roughly
half of the country’s GDP, increased by 0.5%
year over year in the second quarter.
Manufacturing expanded by 2.7% year on year in
the second quarter, up from the 0.4% growth in
the first three months of 2025.
PRESSURE TO MEET TARIFF DEADLINE
MOUNTS
South Korea faces a race to negotiate lower
tariffs on the country imposed by the US,
currently set at 25% and will take effect on 1
August if a deal is not reached.
However, scheduled talks between the two
countries on 25 July were cancelled as US
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had a
scheduling conflict, according to South Korea’s
Finance Ministry on Thursday.
The meeting will be rescheduled, the ministry
added.
Depending on the trade talk outcome, South
Korea’s economy might grow by just 0.7% this
year, according to Singapore-based ASEAN+3
Macroeconomic Research Office (AMRO) in an
outlook on 23 July.
Another key focus for South Korea is reducing
automotive tariffs, with auto majors such as
Hyundai and Kia dependent on exports to the US.
A precedent has been set via a
US-Japan trade deal, which reduces Japanese
automotive export tariffs to the US to 15% from
25% previously.
TRADE MINISTER EYES PETROCHEMICAL
INDUSTRY REFORMS
Plans to revitalize the petrochemical industry
have also stalled amid political instability
wrought by former President Yoon Suk Yeol’s
declaration of martial law back in December.
New Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy, Kim
Jung-kwan, who took office in June, has
expressed his willingness to restructure
South Korea’s petrochemical industry, starting
with the consolidation of naphtha cracking
centers (NCC), located in the cities of Ulsan,
Yeosu and Daesan.
The NCC is a facility that produces
general-purpose products such as ethylene,
propylene and benzene, which are building
blocks for the petrochemical industry.
Laws preventing monopolies under the Fair Trade
Act are a current stumbling block for such
consolidation plans, and an exemption from the
clause will have to be sought for plans to
proceed.
The hope is that a new government and greater
political stability will pave the way for the
restructuring of the struggling sector, even in
the face of US tariffs threatening to slow the
global economy down.
Focus article by Jonathan
Yee
Gas24-Jul-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China has proposed new
industry standards for low-carbon, clean and
renewable hydrogen, introducing stricter carbon
thresholds that align renewable hydrogen with
international benchmarks, particularly those of
the EU.
China tightens hydrogen carbon limits and
introduces a formal life cycle accounting
method to guide industry compliance and
emissions tracking
New rules align with international
standards, paving way for future long-term
export compatibility
Standard supports a multi-pathway model to
back both fossil and renewable hydrogen
The draft 2025 “Clean and Low-Carbon Hydrogen
Evaluation Standard” also preserves a
multi-pathway development model that supports
diverse hydrogen production routes, and hence
could accelerate domestic hydrogen industry
growth, reflect the nation’s
“establish-before-break” approach to energy
transition, as well as enhance future export
readiness.
The standard, overseen by the China Electricity
Council and led by Guoneng HydrogenTech, aims
to be finalized by August 2025. It marks a
shift from the 2020 group-led T/CAB0078—2020 to
a government-backed industrial standard under
the National Energy Administration (NEA). The
upgrade strengthens China’s regulatory
foundation to prepare for future international
certification and trade.
The 2025 revision introduces stricter carbon
intensity caps:
The 2025 standard also defines, for the first
time, a clear methodology for calculating
carbon intensity thresholds.
The baseline carbon intensity of hydrogen
production in 2020, the year when China first
proposed its “dual carbon” goal, was calculated
at 17.704 kgCO2e/kgH2, (kilograms of
carbon dioxide equivalent per kilogram of
hydrogen) weighted across coal-based, natural
gas-based, and industrial by-product hydrogen.
Coal-based hydrogen: Set at
24 kgCO2e/kgH2, based on International Energy
Agency (IEA) estimates and empirical data
from six major domestic projects including
those from China Energy and Sinopec,
averaging 23.4 kgCO2e/kgH2. The figure
reflects the dominant method in China and is
considered broadly representative.
Natural gas hydrogen:
Benchmarked at 11.45 kgCO2e/kgH2, in line
with IEA’s Opportunities for Hydrogen
Production with carbon capture, utilization
and storage (CCUS) in China report. A
domestic survey of 21 projects showed a
broader range (7–17 kg kgCO2e/kgH2, hence
averaging 12 kgCO2e/kgH2), but the IEA
average was adopted for consistency and
stability.
Industrial by-product
hydrogen: Established at 2.88
kgCO2e/kgH2, based on data from 37 projects
across the five key hydrogen fuel cell
vehicle demonstration clusters in China:
Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei, Shanghai, Guangdong,
Zhengzhou, and Hebei. Sources include coke
oven gas, chlor-alkali, steam cracking,
propane dehydrogenation, coal tar upgrading,
styrene production, and others. Weighted
averages were calculated by production
volume.
Using the emission reduction forecasts by China
Energy Investment Corp in its “China Energy
Outlook 2060”, the standard sets carbon targets
for clean and low-carbon hydrogen reflecting
projected improvements by 2040 and 2060.
Renewable hydrogen’s threshold is derived from
measured emissions during electrolysis and
compression, plus grid electricity-related
emissions.
China has established detailed methodologies
for calculating hydrogen’s carbon footprint
using a full life cycle assessment (LCA)
approach, or a cradle-to-gate scope, which
aligns with global practices in carbon
accounting.
The 2025 draft hydrogen standard defines the
carbon footprint of hydrogen (CFPH2) as the sum
of greenhouse gas emissions from four
stages—raw material extraction, transportation,
production, and on-site storage—minus any
carbon dioxide captured and permanently stored
via carbon capture and storage (CCS).
The calculation is expressed as:
CFPₕ₂
= (E_raw + E_trans + E_prod + E_sto
– R_CCS) × A_H2 /
Q_H2
Where:
CFPH2 is
the carbon footprint of hydrogen (kg CO2e per
kg H2)
E_raw = emissions from raw
material acquisition (t CO2e)
E_trans = emissions from
material transport (t CO2e)
E_prod = emissions during
hydrogen production (t CO2e)
E_sto = emissions from
on-site storage and handling (t CO2e)
R_CCS = CO₂ captured and
permanently stored (t CO2)
A_H2 = allocation factor for
hydrogen relative to co-products (%)
Q_H2 = quantity of hydrogen
produced (t)
THREE-TIER SYSTEM SUPPORTS INDUSTRIAL
SCALING
This 2025 standard codifies a three-tier system
– low-carbon, clean, and renewable hydrogen –
designed to accommodate diverse production
methods, including fossil fuels-based
production with CCUS. This approach supports
industrial scaling while avoiding early
bottlenecks, consistent with the government’s
build-before-phase out strategy for new energy
like hydrogen.
The EU’s latest regulatory move underscores the
relevance of China’s strategy. In July 2025,
the European Commission published the
methodology for defining low-carbon hydrogen,
requiring a 70% reduction in greenhouse gases
compared with unabated fossil fuels.
The regulated act complements existing RFNBO
(Renewable Fuels of Non-Biological Origin)
protocols and applies to both domestic
production and importsand recognizes CCUS-based
fossil fuels as eligible production pathways of
low-carbon hydrogen.
EXPORT READINESS LIMITED DESPITE
ALIGNMENT IN STANDARD
China’s new draft renewable hydrogen threshold
(≤2.00 kgCO2e/kgH2) is among the world’s most
stringent.
Combined with estimated emissions from domestic
transportation and for deliveries to Europe,
the total carbon footprint remains under the
EU’s RFNBO limit.
For renewable hydrogen, inputs must come
exclusively from non-fossil sources powered by
renewable electricity, echoing EU requirements
for RFNBOs. Clean and low-carbon hydrogen have
no such restrictions on feedstock type or
energy source.
China’s stricter hydrogen rules bring it closer
to global standards, but the country’s export
readiness remains limited in the immediate
years.
Renewable hydrogen makes up merely 2% of
national output at present, with coal
continuing to dominate..
In addition to scaling up hydrogen production,
large-scale exports will require robust export
logistics and infrastructure, technical
validation, trusted certification systems,
mutual recognition of certification mechanisms
such as Guarantees of Origin and third-party
voluntary schemes, and stronger emissions
tracking across the supply chain — all of which
remain underdeveloped.
The new standard in China lays the groundwork
for future alignment with EU rules and
long-term access to the global markets.
Insight article by Patricia
Tao
Visit the Hydrogen
Topic Page for more update on
hydrogen
Recycled Polyethylene Terephthalate23-Jul-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–US-based Blue Polymers has
registered a company at the site of Evergreen
Recycling’s plant in Riverside, California,
according to a state
filing, amid talk that Blue Polymers plans
to buy the site.
Blue Polymers is the
joint venture between waste magnate
Republic Services and distribution giant
Ravago. The company did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
The new company, Blue Polymers Riverside, LLC
initially filed a statement of information with
the California Secretary of State on 8 July
2025. The mailing address of the new company is
the site of Evergreen’s facility in Riverside.
The fate of the Evergreen Riverside facility
has been the center of market speculation for
over a year.
Evergreen had recently announced the
partial closure of the Riverside facility
in January, laying off over 50 workers and
shutting down bale and flake processing
equipment at the end of March.
Market conditions in California have been
particularly difficult for domestic recyclers
in recent years. Recycler margins are being
squeezed between elevated bale feedstock costs
due to export demand from Mexico, and low sales
prices due to competition with imported resin.
Several recyclers in the region have been known
to cut production during various downcycles –
sometimes by as much as 40%.
The purchase of the Riverside facility
complements existing assets of Republic
Services, who have been producing recycled
polyethylene terephthalate (R-PET) flake out of
their Las
Vegas, Nevada, polymer center since late
2023. Now, flake has a guaranteed end market in
the region, though overall R-PET demand
conditions in the West Coast remain shaky.
Republic Services Polymer Centers sort mixed
plastic waste and produce R-PET flake, while
sending sorted waste polyolefin material to
Blue Polymers facilities for further
processing.
Blue Polymers facilities will then flake and
pelletize the recycled polypropylene (R-PP) and
recycled polyethylene (R-PE) material, to be
distributed by Ravago.
With this potential acquisition, Blue Polymers
would also enter the R-PET pellet market.
The first Blue Polymers facility is now running
in Indianapolis, Indiana, and the second in
Buckeye, Arizona, is slated to be operational
by end of year.
The third
Republic Services Polymer Center is likely
to be Allentown, Pennsylvania, according to a
February property sale record to owner Republic
Polymers III, though it is unknown if there
will be a co-located Blue Polymers facility.

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Acrylate Esters23-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Europe’s oxo-alcohols and
derivatives markets remain structurally weak,
with some players beginning to feel the onset
of the summer slowdown.
Ongoing economic weakness and geopolitical
uncertainty continue to dampen sentiment, with
activity expected to slow further from late
July into August as summer holidays begin.
Oxo-alcohols and their derivative markets are
not expected to experience significant demand
changes in H2 2025.
Oxo-alcohols and butyl acetate reporter, Marion
Boakye, joins acrylate esters editor,
Mathew Jolin-Beech, and glycol ethers editor,
Cameron Birch, to discuss current conditions
along the oxo-alcohols value chain.
Ethylene22-Jul-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US and the Philippines
reached a trade deal, under which the US will
impose 19% tariffs on imports from the island
nation, while its shipments will enter the
country duty free, President Donald Trump said
on Tuesday.
“In addition, we will work together
Militarily,” Trump said on social media.
No reports of any trade deal were found on
websites of the Philippine
Information Agency or the Philippine News
Agency.
The rate disclosed by the US is 1 point below
the 20% rate that Trump proposed in a letter he
sent to the Philippines.
Chemical trade between the two countries is
relatively small. The Philippines exports
mostly polyethylene terephthalate (PET) to the
US and imports polyethylene (PE), base oils and
acrylate esters, according to the ICIS Supply
and Demand Database.
The Philippines is the largest source of US
imports of coconut oil, a feedstock used to
make oleochemicals.
The following table shows 2024 US imports from
the Philippines and exports to the Philippines.
Figures are in US dollars.
Imports for Consumption
($)
Domestic Exports ($)
US Deficit ($)
13,930,354,398
8,293,021,350
5,637,333,048
Source: US International Trade
Commission
The Philippines is the fourth country with
which the US said it reached a trade deal,
following agreements struck with the UK,
Vietnam and Indonesia.
The US said its imports will enter Vietnam and
Indonesia tariff free. It will impose tariffs
of 19% on Indonesian imports and 20% tariffs on
Vietnamese imports.
For UK imports, the US will impose 10% tariffs.
The UK made concessions on US imports of
ethanol and beef.
NEGOTIATIONS ONGOING FOR NUMEROUS
COUNTRIESIn July, the US
proposed tariffs on imports from the EU and 24
countries. The proposed rates will take effect
on 1 August if the countries cannot reach a
trade agreement or if the US does not postpone
the duties.
The following table shows the proposed rates
and the actual rates for any countries with
which the US said it reached trade agreements.
Country
Proposed rate
Trade Deal
Algeria
30%
NA
Bangladesh
35%
NA
Bosnia and Herzegovina
30%
NA
Brazil
50%
NA
Brunei
25%
NA
Cambodia
36%
NA
Canada
35%
NA
EU
30%
NA
Indonesia
32%
19%
Iraq
30%
NA
Japan
25%
NA
Kazakhstan
25%
NA
Laos
40%
NA
Libya
30%
NA
Malaysia
25%
NA
Mexico
30%
NA
Moldova
25%
NA
Myanmar
40%
NA
Philippines
20%
19%
Serbia
35%
NA
South Africa
30%
NA
South Korea
25%
NA
Sri Lanka
30%
NA
Thailand
36%
NA
Tunisia
25%
NA
Acetic Acid22-Jul-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Sherwin-Williams expects prices
for some of its petrochemical feedstock to
decline during the second half of 2025 amid a
weakening demand outlook that led the paints
and coatings company to lower its earnings and
sales guidance for the year.
The following table compares the company’s
latest earnings guidance with its previous one.
LATEST
PREVIOUS
Net sales
Up or down low-single digits
Up low-single digits
Diluted net income/share
$10.11-10.41
$10.70-11.10
Adjusted net income/share
$11.20-11.50
$11.65-12.05
Source: Sherwin-Williams
Shares of Sherwin-Williams are down by more
than 2%.
ARCHITECTURAL VOLUMES WORSE THAN
EXPECTEDSherwin-Williams is
lowering its guidance in part because
architectural sales volumes were softer than
expected. In addition, the company has reduced
production gallons within its global supply
chain, which introduced inefficiencies.
The overall outlook is for demand to be softer
for longer, said Heidi Petz, CEO of
Sherwin-Williams. She made her comments during
an earnings conference call.
Mortgage rates will likely end the year at
6.5%, according to Fannie Mae, a US company
that buys home loans and securitizes them.
Mortgage rates need to fall below 6% before the
housing market gets a boost, Petz said.
Demand actually deteriorated in some segments,
such as new residential, do-it-yourself (DIY)
and coil coatings.
“To be clear, we expect no help from the market
over the remainder of the year,” Petz said.
SOFTER DEMAND CONTRIBUTES TO
DEFLATIONThe weaker economic
outlook has led Sherwin-Williams to expect
costs to decline modestly for some of its raw
materials, such as solvents and some of its
resins.
On the other hand, tariffs are pushing costs
higher for applicators, extenders, pigments
other than titanium dioxide (TiO2) and
packaging. Many paint cans are made of steel,
and the US has imposed new tariffs on imports
of the metal
Possible tariffs on lumber and other timber
products would indirectly affect
Sherwin-Williams by raising costs for house
construction, a significant end market for its
architectural coatings.
The US started a section 232 investigation
into such imports, and a report is due at the
end of November.
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS SPEEDS UP COST
CUTTINGBecause of the weaker
outlook, Sherwin-Williams is speeding up its
earlier cost-cutting plan. The company is now
planning on $105 million or 32 cents/share of
restructuring initiatives for 2025, up from $50
million or 15 cents/share announced earlier in
the year. The program should cut annual costs
by $80 million.
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS SEES CHANCE TO TAKE
MARKET SHARE FROM
COMPETITORSSherwin-Williams’
competitors are contending with the same
low-growth outlook, and its largest competitors
have made “significant reductions in
customer-facing positions and assets”, Petz
said, without naming the companies. One unnamed
competitor is imposing high single-digit price
increases during the middle of the painting
season, a move that can disrupt customers’
operations.
Sherwin-Williams sees these moves by its
competitors as an opportunity to capture market
share.
“We continue to believe we are at a major
inflection point in the North American
architectural coatings industry and we refuse
to miss this once-in-a-career opportunity
that’s unfolding before us,” Petz said.
Sherwin-Williams did not discuss any
opportunities presented to the company
by the sale of PPG’s US and Canadian
architectural coatings to American Industrial
Partners (AIP).
(recast paragraph 1 with the year 2025.)
Ethylene22-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–German chemical, pharmaceutical
and other companies can expect to see a sharp
decline in their exports to the important US
market, as a result of tariffs, Jorg Kramer,
chief economist at Germany’s Commerzbank, said
in a webinar hosted by chemical producers’
trade group VCI.
US protectionism to last for years
Germany to see near-term pick-up in GDP
Berlin unlikely to dismantle domestic
obstacles to growth
Commerzbank assumes that a US-EU trade deal,
once reached, could lead to an average US
import tariff of 15% on EU goods, which could
imply that Germany’s exports to the US drop by
one-third, Kramer said.
The US tariffs marked a “historic shift”
(Zeitenwende) away from globalization to
de-globalization, over the coming years, if not
decades, he said.
“This will make for a difficult environment for
Germany’s industry, and of course for its
chemical industry,” he said.
At the same time, US tariffs on China were
leading to more exports from China to Europe
and Germany, putting pressure on prices, he
said.
The causes for the US sentiment against free
trade could be found in China’s accession to
the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001,
Kramer said.
Without China’s integration into the WTO, and
the issues that caused, the high level of US
protectionism would not have occurred, he said.
Chinese companies had built up massive overcapacities,
causing declining producer prices and a push
into export markets, he said.
About 23% of Chinese companies were making
losses yet continued to operate, he noted.
US TO AVOID RECESSION
Meanwhile, although the tariff uncertainties
would lead to lower economic growth in the US
as well, the country would not fall into
recession, Kramer said.
US President Donald Trump had taken over a
“very solid economy”, Kramer said. Trump was
inaugurated on 20 January.
Since the pandemic, the US economy grew by a
cumulative 12%, Kramer said.
That growth alone was equivalent to Germany’s
total GDP, demonstrating the “underlying
dynamic” and strength of the US economy, he
said.
GERMANY WILL NOT RISE TO TARIFF
CHALLENGE
As for Germany, the country would see a
recovery next year, largely driven by lower
interest rates and planned debt-financed
government spending
on infrastructure and defense, he said.
There would be a near-term boost to GDP as the
government was shifting defense and
infrastructure spending out of its core budget,
which would then create new room for spending
in the core budget, he explained.
The recovery, with GDP growth of about 1.4% in
2026, may be a “flash in the pan”, but that was
still better than a permanent recession, he
said.
Germany’s GDP fell in both 2023 and 2024. For
2025, economists currently forecast 0.2-0.4%
growth.
However, Kramer is skeptical that Germany will
rise to the US tariff challenge and take it as
an opportunity for a much-needed reset or
restart (Neustart) of its economy, with Berlin
addressing bureaucracy, high taxes, high labor
costs, high energy costs, complex and expensive
permitting processes, and other impediments to
growth, he said.
Taxes: As it stands, it
remains unclear if the new coalition
government under Chancellor Friedrich Merz
will really cut corporate taxes, Kramer said.
Labor costs: Germany’s
already high labor costs and social security
levies would continue to rise, he said.
Infrastructure: The
government’s promised investments in
infrastructure would continue to take years
to realize as the country’s many
environmental groups remain powerful, meaning
that they can block or delay projects.
Energy: Germany would remain
a high-cost country, and many chemical
companies have already reacted by shutting
capacities, he said.
Bureaucracy: While promising
to reduce bureaucracy and red tape, over the
last 20 years all German governments failed
to keep those promises.
Reducing bureaucracy could only succeed if
government trusts companies, and Kramer doubts
that the government does, he said.
Meanwhile major German chemical firms – BASF,
Covestro and Brenntag – have already written
off 2025 and cut
their earnings forecasts amid weak demand
and the tariff uncertainties.
VCI, for its part, expects a 2% decline in
Germany’s chemical production (excluding
pharmaceuticals) in 2025.
Please also visit:
US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy
Thumbnail photo: The seat of Germany’s
parliament in Berlin. Source:
Shutterstock.
Speciality Chemicals22-Jul-2025
BARCELONA (ICIS)–Slowing demand growth and a
battle for market share between Saudi Arabia
and the US could see crude oil prices drop
significantly by the end of the year.
High oil prices stimulate more production,
low prices less
Saudi Arabia and the US battle for market
share
Global demand for oil is around 100 million
barrels/day
Electric vehicles (EVs) have destroyed 2
million barrels/day of oil demand
Around 20% of global vehicle sales are EVs
Oil prices could fall to $40-$45/barrel by
the end of the year
Oil demand growth weakest in 16 years
Low oil price is double-edged sword for
chemical markets
In this Think Tank podcast, Will
Beacham interviews ICIS Insight
Editor Tom Brown 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.
Polyethylene22-Jul-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Click here to see the
latest blog post on Asian Chemical Connections
by John Richardson: From 1992 until 2021,
predicting chemicals and polymers markets was
simple. Booming China, youthful consumer
demand, and stable globalization made
assumptions as comfortable as an old pair of
carpet slippers. Climate change risks felt
distant, and plastic waste implications were
largely overlooked.
Not anymore. The slippers have fallen apart.
We’re now navigating wildly difficult market
conditions, like walking barefoot on a pebble
beach – sharp pains could hit at any moment.
Some analysts are waiting for a return to the
“Old Normal.” But as the saying goes, “Those
who can’t count the things that count, count
the things that don’t count.” Markets are much
more complex now; we must acknowledge this to
move forward.
The good news? AI offers a lifeline. It can
help us measure complex patterns humans can’t,
from the impact of climate migration on demand
to how geopolitical shifts reshape trade. It
can also optimize plastic waste recycling and
effectively monitor carbon emissions for fair
taxation/credits.
This new era demands multi-layered scenario
planning. For example, you should combine my
Iran-Israel crisis scenarios, from my 1 July
post, with three global economic scenarios
(produced with the help of ChatGPT Plus)
stemming from US President Donald Trump’s
recent tariff announcements.
Here’s a snapshot of what could happen:
Best-Case: Tariffs soften, markets
stabilize, and global GDP takes only a mild
hit.
Medium-Case: Tariffs escalate, retaliation
begins. Supply chains stress, stagflation fears
return, and major economies flirt with
recession.
Worst-Case: All-in trade war, depression
risk. Global GDP contracts sharply, trade
collapses, and unemployment surges worldwide.
Confused? You should be! The only sensible
response is to embrace complex and nuanced
scenario planning to protect your business.
Editor’s note: This blog post is an opinion
piece. The views expressed are those of the
author, and do not necessarily represent those
of ICIS.
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