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Viewing 11-20 results of 58573
Gas04-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)– The Energy Community celebrates
its 20th anniversary this year.
Established in the aftermath of the Balkans war
and the accession of many central European
countries to the EU, the institution faces
similar challenges now, being instrumental in
supporting Ukraine’s energy resilience in the
face of Russian attacks and assisting
contracting parties on their path towards EU
energy market integration.
In this interview, Energy Community director,
Artur Lorkowski, tells ICIS journalist Aura
Sabadus about the pending opening of the EU
energy chapter for Ukraine, Moldova and
Bosnia-Herzegovina as part of their accession
negotiations as well as the work done to engage
observer countries such as Armenia and
Norway.
Crude Oil04-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–European chemicals producer
prices continued to fall in May at a more
significant rate than previous months,
according to the latest data from Eurostat on
Friday.
Prices for chemicals manufacturers fell by 1.0%
in the EU and 0.9% in the eurozone, supported
by declines in key producing countries.
Germany saw the most moderate decline at 0.5%
on April prices. The biggest decline was
recorded by Spanish producers, down 1.4%,
following a 1.0% decrease a month prior, while
France tracked a 1.1% drop compared with a 1.5%
drop in April.
Lower prices for the chemicals sector
outstripped the fall in overall industrial
producer prices, which was 0.6% lower for both
regions.
The main driver for decreases was energy
pricing, which dropped 2.3% in the EU and 2.1%
in the eurozone, with all other segments for
remaining relatively stable on the previous
month.
This decline in energy pricing was key to lower
chemicals prices for May, as this provided some
leverage for producers to offer more
competitive rates while providing some buffer
to margins.
Poor demand in Europe has meant that producers
could not sustain prices at higher levels,
despite a challenging business environment, as
cheap imports remain abundant for many
commodities.
Overall producer prices continue tracking
declines at less substantial than a year prior,
although they remain significantly higher than
2021 levels, when markets were reshaped in the
aftermath of the pandemic.
Source: Eurostat
Eurostat data is subject to revision.
Thumbnail image source: Shutterstock
Mixed Xylenes04-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–In this podcast, ICIS market
editors Zubair Adam and Miguel Rodriguez
Fernandez discuss the low levels of xylene
consumption in Europe.
Mixed xylene consumption lethargic due to
US tariff uncertainty
PX demand remains low on competitive PET,
PTA imports
Europe PX exports to US also affected by US
tariffs
Mixed xylenes (MX) are traded in two grades.
The isomer-grade xylene is used mainly to
produce paraxylene (PX) and orthoxylene (OX).
The main application for solvent grade is as a
raw material for dyes, organic pigments,
perfumes and medicines, and as a general
solvent for paints and agricultural pesticides.
PX is widely used as a building block to
manufacture other industrial chemicals, notably
purified terephthalic acid (PTA) and dimethyl
terephthalate (DMT).
OX is used mostly to produce phthalic anhydride
(PA), an important intermediate that leads
principally to various coatings and plastics.

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Speciality Chemicals03-Jul-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Rates for shipping containers
from east Asia and China to the US continued to
slide this week as demand has eased and
capacity has lengthened.
Global average rates fell by almost 6% and are
just below $3,000/FEU (40-foot equivalent unit)
and around four-month lows, according to supply
chain advisors Drewry and as shown in the
following chart.
Drewry’s rates from Shanghai to Los Angeles
dropped by 15% week on week, while rates from
Shanghai to New York fell by 11%, as shown in
the following chart.
“This decline is a direct result of the low
demand for US-bound cargo and is a sign that
the recent surge in US imports, which occurred
after the temporary halt of higher US tariffs, will not
have the lasting impact we had initially
expected,” Drewry said.
Drewry expects spot rates to continue to
decline next week as well due to excess
capacity and weak demand.
Drewry’s container forecaster continues to see
softening rates in the second half of the year,
with the timing and volatility of rate changes
dependent on US President Donald Trump’s future
tariffs and on capacity changes related to the
introduction of the US penalties on Chinese
ships, which are uncertain.
Rates from online freight shipping marketplace
and platform provider Freightos also showed
significant decreases to both US coasts.
Judah Levine, head of research at Freightos,
said the US’s 12 May tariff reduction on
Chinese goods spurred a rebound in China-US
container volumes that seems to be losing
steam.
“Possibly expecting a longer demand surge,
carriers have also added what is now too much
capacity to the transpacific, especially to the
West Coast,” Levine said.
Even with these tariff-driven pressures that
pushed rates up sharply in June, however, the
peaks for both lanes were at least $1,000/FEU
lower than prices a year ago and may point to
overall capacity growth in the container
market, Levine said.
Container ships and costs for shipping
containers are relevant to the chemical
industry because while most chemicals are
liquids and are shipped in tankers, container
ships transport polymers, such as polyethylene
(PE) and polypropylene (PP), are shipped in
pellets. Titanium dioxide (TiO2) is also
shipped in containers.
They also transport liquid chemicals in
isotanks.
CONTAINER IMPORT TARIFFS AVERAGE 21% –
MAERSKUS importers averaged an
effective 21% tariff on all containerized
imports, according to container shipping major
Maersk.
In a market update, the carrier said visibility
has worsened and trade barriers have increased
since the US formally announced its tariff
package to the world on 2 April, the carrier
said.
“On average, companies are currently paying an
effective average tariff rate of approximately
21% relative to container load on all US
imports,” according to Maersk’s
container-weighted effective average tariff
rate metric.
At its peak, shortly after 2 April, the average
effective rate was 54%.
The following chart from Maersk shows the
container-weighted average effective tariff
rate on US imports from 5 November.
“For now, most country-specific import tariffs
are paused while long-term deals are being
negotiated, with deadlines coming up in July
and August,” Maersk said.
LIQUID TANKER RATES EDGE LOWER ON
TRANSATLANTIC
Rates for liquid chemical tankers ex-US Gulf
were largely stable this week, except for
declines along the US Gulf (USG) to Europe
trade lane. This route remains largely
dependent on strong contract volumes as most of
the regular carriers were able to fill any
excess capacity.
Despite the limited available space, spot
cargoes were not really discussed in the market
this week as any spot interest is all but
nonexistent along this trade lane. Most of the
spot cargoes reported were diethylene glycol
(DEG), styrene and caustic soda.
From the USG to Asia, spot rates remain soft,
particularly for smaller parcels but remain
steady for larger parcels as the lingering
uncertainty around tariffs continues to weigh
on the market. The market overall has been
relatively weak, leaving owners to remain
flexible on rates to complete voyages.
Spot cargoes of monoethylene glycol (MEG) and
ethanol were seen in the market for July and
early August dates. At present, owners are
awaiting final contract nominations so it is
still unclear whether any additional space will
be available. If nominations are slower than
expected, this would open additional space and
could push rates lower.
On the USG to Brazil trade lane, the market has
been steady leading rates to remain unchanged
week on week. There was a stable level of spot
activity with only a handful of new
requirements, however, there was a slight
uptick in spot inquiries but not enough to
influence a change in rates. Most frequently
discussed in the market were ethanol and
caustic soda cargoes. Several traders
reported inquiries about a one-year period
contract of affreightment (COA) of various easy
chemicals, starting in September for 5,000
tonnes/month.
Bunker fuel prices continue to remain strong,
on the back of higher energy prices due to the
ongoing middle east crisis and volatility.
Additional reporting by Kevin
Callahan
Visit the US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy topic page
Visit the Logistics:
Impact on chemicals and energy topic
page
Polyethylene03-Jul-2025
Brazil’s protectionism benefits few but ‘suffocates’ plastics
transformers, manufacturing – Abiplast
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Brazil’s highly protectionist
model to cushion domestic producers from
overseas competition is suffocating other parts
of the production chain in a country obliged to
import around half of its chemicals demand, the
trade group representing plastics transformers
Abiplast said this week.
Instead of helping to maintain or expand
industrialization, those “misguided”
protectionist policies have contributed to the
opposite in past decades, added Abiplast.
The trade group’s statement could be seen as
part of its lobbing against antidumping duties
(ADDs) in place or being studied on several
polymers, as well as the import tariffs on
several chemicals implemented in October 2024
for 12 months and which continuation must be
decided upon in coming weeks.
COSTS ON
TRANSFORMERSAbiplast said some
of the higher import tariffs implemented in
2024 or ADDs in place have hit its member
companies hard as they have to pay more key
materials such the widely used polymers:
polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP),
polyvinyl chloride (PVC), or polyethylene
terephthalate (PET).
“We are the only country in the world to apply
antidumping measures on PP against the US,
while other essential resins such as PVC, PET
and PE continue to be protected by heavy
tariffs. This model, which is repeated
systematically, has suffocated the industry,
hindering our competitiveness and innovation,”
said Abiplast.
“[The hike in import tariffs in 2024] Deepened
the cost gap we face: we pay up to 40% more for
plastic resins than our international
competitors. The result: more expensive
products for Brazilians, higher inflation, and
less capacity to compete globally. This
protectionist policy, instead of strengthening,
accelerates the country’s deindustrialization.”
Abiplast members are not only being hit by
higher costs but by lost work as companies are
increasingly opting to import finished
products, instead of buying them from local
transformers as their final prices have risen
due to the higher tariffs.
According to its calculations, imports of
finished plastic products grew by 29% in 2024,
a figure which could even be higher this year
since the hike in tariffs only affected the
last quarter of 2024.
The increase will be inevitable because, “we
suffocate those who transform and create
opportunities”, in Brazil as companies buy
finished product abroad due to high prices at
home, ultimately propping up other countries’
manufacturing sectors, said Abiplast.
“We cannot accept that the defense of strategic
inputs devastates important sectors and
destroys jobs. The government urgently needs to
take a strategic look at the development of the
entire productive sector, in order to
strengthen the country’s economy,” said
Abiplast.
“If it wants to promote innovation,
sustainability and competitiveness, it must
break with the logic of permanent protection of
raw materials and balance the tariff
escalation. Brazil can no longer be a prisoner
of policies that support a few and harm many.”
UNPLEASANT
REALITIESAbiplast finished
saying that, while Brazil’s policymakers and
analyst at large are highly critical of the US’
protectionist shift with Donald Trump as
president, the reality in Brazil does not
differ much from that of the US.
In Brazil, sharply higher US import tariffs
announced and then paused by US President
Donald Trump in April came to be known as the
‘tarifaco’ – which could be translated as the
big tariff hit.
The difference between the US and Brazil’s
‘tarifacos’ is that Brazil’s has been going on
for decades and it has been suffered in silence
by many companies in manufacturing, said
Abiplast.
“While the world is perplexed by Donald Trump’s
super tariff package against China, here we
have been living with a silent
tarifaco for years,” it concluded.
Brazil’s Ministry of Development, Industry,
Trade and Services, which oversees foreign
trade policies under the body Gecex, had not
responded to a request for comment at the time
of writing.
Abiquim, which represents chemicals producers
such as Braskem or Unipar, and which has
actively lobbied for most of the protectionist
measures Abiplast criticizes, had not responded
to a request for comment at the time of
writing.
Thumbnail image: Santos Port in Sao Paulo
state, Latin America’s largest port (Image
source: Port of Santos Authority)
Hydrogen (Energy Editorial)03-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–European policymakers need to
accelerate hydrogen mobility in the region to
avoid it stagnating, a group of CEOs have
stated in a joint letter to EU and Member State
leaders.
The letter has been signed by executives from
more than 30 companies, including chemicals
firms such as Syensqo, Chemours, Johnson
Matthey and Honeywell.
They are calling for hydrogen mobility to be
firmly positioned at the heart of Europe’s
clean transport and industrial strategies.
Immediate and targeted policy support should be
utilized to unlock investment, and scale
deployment of hydrogen vehicles and
infrastructure across the EU.
“Despite progress, the CEOs warn that hydrogen
mobility in Europe will stagnate unless a more
coordinated and pragmatic policy framework is
implemented to support the rollout of the
necessary infrastructure and achieve the scale
needed for the hydrogen mobility market to
flourish,” said the Global Hydrogen Mobility
Alliance, a recently launched lobby group which
has publicized the letter.
Cost and complexity should be reduced by
simplifying EU regulations, the group added.
Crude Oil03-Jul-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Indonesia has signed
agreements worth around $27 billion with Saudi
Arabia during President Prabowo Subianto’s
visit to the Middle East kingdom, in areas
including petrochemicals and energy.
The agreements and memorandums of understanding
(MoU) span private sector institutions between
the two countries in fields such as clean
energy, petrochemical industries, and aviation
fuel services, according to a statement by the
Saudi Press Agency (SPA) on 2 July.
Other areas of cooperation agreed upon include
the development of the circular carbon economy
and clean hydrogen, as well as the supply of
crude oil and petrochemicals.
Among the agreements include Indonesia state
oil and gas firm Pertamina’s collaboration with
ACWA Power for the development of 500MW of
clean energy, and Pertamina Patra Niaga’s
cooperation with AlShams for jet fuel
services, according to a statement by the
Indonesian Kementerian Luar Negeri (Ministry of
Foreign Affairs) on Thursday.
President Prabowo left Saudi Arabia on
Thursday.
Bilateral trade between Saudi Arabia and
Indonesia amounted to around $31.5 billion over
the past five years, SPA said.
Discussions between Indonesia and the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC) on a free trade
agreement (FTA) are underway.
The GCC is a Middle Eastern bloc consisting of
Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and
the United Arab Emirates.
Discussions on the FTA were last held in
February 2025 and both Saudi Arabia and
Indonesia expressed their aspirations to
conclude discussions in the near future, the
two sides said during the meeting.
Ethylene02-Jul-2025
Correction: In the ICIS story headlined “US announces
Vietnam trade deal, will impose 20% tariffs” dated 2 July
2025, please read in paragraphs 7 and 14 as … trillion
… instead of … billion … A corrected story follows.
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US will impose 20% tariffs
on imports from Vietnam and 40% tariffs on
transshipments – while Vietnam will charge no
tariffs on US imports, according to a trade
agreement that the US president announced on
Wednesday.
“The Terms are that Vietnam will pay the United
States a 20% Tariff on any and all goods sent
into our Territory, and a 40% Tariff on any
Transshipping,” President Donald Trump said on
social media. “In return, Vietnam will do
something that they have never done before,
give the United States of America TOTAL ACCESS
to their Markets for Trade. In other words,
they will ‘OPEN THEIR MARKET TO THE UNITED
STATES,’ meaning that, we will be able to sell
our product into Vietnam at ZERO Tariff.”
The transshipment tariff would discourage China
or other countries using Vietnam as an
intermediary to export goods to the US under
more favorable trade terms.
Meanwhile, tariffs are not paid by the country
of origin. Instead, they are
a tax levied by the government on the importer
of record.
The government of Vietnam has not confirmed the
tariff rates, but it did say that the
negotiating delegations of the two countries
had reached a joint statement on what it called
“a fair, balanced reciprocal trade agreement”.
Vietnam also urged the US to recognize it as a
market economy and to lift export restrictions
on certain high-tech products.
Vietnam is the sixth largest source of imports
by value to the US in 2024, with shipments
totaling $136.5 billion.
The US had initially proposed tariffs on
Vietnamese imports of 46% on 2 April. Those
were soon lowered to 10% during a 90-day pause
that is scheduled to end on 9 July.
VIETNAMESE TRADE DEAL TO HAVE LITTLE
IMMEDIATE CHEM EFFECTFor now,
the trade deal will have little immediate
effect on shipments of plastics and chemicals
between the countries.
The US imports small amounts of plastics and
chemicals from Vietnam.
Electronic machinery, parts for nuclear plants
and furniture made up more than 60% of the
goods the US imported from the country in 2024.
Organic chemicals, plastics and rubber each
made up less than 5% of total US imports from
Vietnam in 2024.
For US exports to Vietnam, plastics made up the
second largest category, accounting for 6.37%
of the total in value.
On a volume basis, some of the largest plastic
exports from the US to Vietnam include linear
low density polyethylene (LLDPE), high density
polyethylene (HDPE) and polyvinyl chloride
(PVC), according to ICIS.
In total, the US exported $11.4 billion to
Vietnam in 2024.
US imports will play a larger role in Vietnam’s
chemical industry after the completion of the
Long Son Petrochemicals Complex, which will
include a cracker that can use ethane or
propane as a feedstock. The complex will
receive ethane from the US
under a 15-year deal between Enterprise
Products and Siam Cement Group (SCG) which owns
the subsidiary that is developing the complex.
VIETNAM IS SECOND TRADE DEAL FOR
USVietnam joins the UK among the
countries that reached trade arrangements with
the US since
it announced on 9 April a 90-day pause on
its proposed reciprocal tariffs on imports from
most of the world.
Under the UK agreement, the US will
preserve its 10% baseline tariffs on imports
from the UK. It will relax its sectoral tariffs
on UK imports of automobiles and eliminate them
on imports of steel and aluminium. The UK made
concessions on US imports of ethanol and beef.
The US and China are working under a different
arrangement under which the two countries
agreed to pause their proposed triple-digit
tariff increases through to mid-August.
The US and Canada
seek to reach a trade agreement by 21 July.
Thumbnail shows a type of container ship
that features prominently in trade. Image by
Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock.
(recast paragraphs 7, 14 with billion instead
of trillion)
Hydrogen02-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–On 2 July, a spokesperson for
energy supplier E.ON told ICIS that its
“international hydrogen imports, hydrogen
production, and midstream activities will be
deprioritized” as part of the company’s
integration of its green gas business into its
energy infrastructure solutions (EIS) business
unit.
E.ON confirmed that this includes the
cancellation of its proposed 20MW
HydroHarbourEssen plant in Essen, Germany. It
was expected to produce 2,300 tons of renewable
hydrogen per year by 2027.
The company also confirmed it had exited the
H2.Ruhr project, a collaboration with Enel,
Iberdrola, ABB and SAP to construct a hydrogen
pipeline in the Ruhr area of Germany, proposed
to initially connect Essen and Duisberg.
Announced in 2021, the project targeted
delivery of up to 80,000 tons of renewable
hydrogen and ammonia per year.
This is the latest blow to the German hydrogen
industry, after steel manufacturer
ArcelorMittal announced last month that it had
cancelled its renewable hydrogen-based
decarbonisation plans for two of its steel
plants in Bremen and Eisenhuttenstadt, despite
securing €1.3 billion in subsidies.
This was followed by postponements of EWE’s
50MW project in Bremen and LEAG’s 10MW plant in
Lusatia.
“National and European overregulation
undermines the economic viability of renewable
energy sources” a spokesperson for EWE told
ICIS at the time.
“The energy sector and industry cannot shoulder
the ramp-up alone. Policymakers must now act
swiftly to establish reliable framework
conditions and targeted incentives to make
investments in hydrogen technologies
economically viable.”
“Uncertainty regarding availability and prices
in a future hydrogen market is high” a
spokesperson for LEAG told ICIS.
“The end of the German Ampel government last
year has indefinitely delayed the
implementation of the federal Power Plant
Safety Act, a key regulatory pre-condition.”
E.ON said that the company “will focus on
integrated, B2B [business-to-business]
customer-oriented hydrogen solutions within the
framework of EIS. This will enable us to create
an even more attractive portfolio of solutions
to support our B2B customers”.
It added that the company is “convinced that
green hydrogen will play a role in a
decarbonized energy future, especially for
hard-to-decarbonize industrial B2B sectors”.
In 2024 E.ON had selected technology group
Andritz to complete feasibility studies for the
HydroHarbourEssen project.
Germany targets 10GW electrolyzer capacity by
2030.
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