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Gas13-Jun-2025
Polish gas grid operator agrees with
Ukrainian counterpart GTSOU to double border
capacity
D.Trading keen to expand portfolio in line
with expected Ukrainian, regional demand growth
More LNG terminals may be needed in
southern Europe
LONDON (ICIS)– Ukraine’s largest private
electricity and gas producer DTEK is exploring
opportunities to secure more LNG as the company
is building a large regional portfolio.
Speaking to ICIS on the sidelines of the ETCSEE
conference on 11 June, James O’Brien, head of
LNG at D.Trading, said the commodity trading
subsidiary was looking to build a large
regional portfolio and import up to 12 cargoes
between now and 2026.
The LNG supplies would complement DTEK’s own
domestic production of around two billion cubic
meters, which the company expects to see rising
in the upcoming years.
D.Trading has been in talks with US producer
Venture Global and already received its first
US LNG cargo at the Revithoussa LNG terminal in
December, aboard the 155,000cbm Gaslog
Savannah.
The two companies announced a heads of
agreement (HOA) in June 2024 for the supply of
US LNG to Ukraine and eastern Europe.
Supply was expected to begin later in 2024
through the end of 2026, with a provision for
D.Trading to buy up to 2mtpa of LNG from
Venture Global’s proposed CP2 LNG export plant
for 20 years.
D.Trading has been exploring additional
delivery opportunities via Poland and
Lithuania, which operate LNG terminals but
limited border capacity had been deterring
companies from using this route.
INCREASED POLISH CAPACITY
However, on 13 June, the Polish gas grid
operator GAZ-System said the firm export
capacity to Ukraine would double from six
million cubic meters/day currently to
11.5mcm/day from 1 July.
The capacity will be offered for monthly
bookings on 16 June.
Poland is one of the cheapest transport routes
for Ukrainian companies, allowing access not
only to LNG imported via its own Swinoujscie
terminal but also from Lithuania’s Klaipeda
terminal and North Sea gas secured via Denmark.
The increase in capacity would help Ukrainian
companies, which need to secure approximately
five billion cubic meters ahead of this year’s
heating season.
However, O’Brien said gas grid operators need
to work flexibly as the LNG sendout from tanks
has a 18-day window, whereas monthly capacity
is booked for 30 days.
He acknowledged the importance of Route 1, a
new
product launched by gas grid operators
along the Trans-Balkan corridor, which would
allow companies to import regasified volumes in
Greece and export them directly to Ukrainian
storage.
He said the new product which would be offered
at a discounted tariff would be in a position
to compete on price with capacity offered via
the Baltic-Polish corridor, although overall
costs would still be high.
LACK OF FLEXIBILITY
He also noted that the product would present a
number of challenges.
“[Route 1] is a step in the right direction
because it opens opportunities to bring LNG
from the southern route. We see growing demand
of around 60 billion cubic meters annually in
central and eastern Europe and there is room to
have more terminals in the south if the EU
proposes to phase out Russian gas,” O’Brien
said.
“[Route 1’s] discounted tariffs will be almost
equal to costs to bring gas from Poland or
Germany. However, you have to have licences all
the way throughout the region and have LNG in
tanks to match the monthly capacity that is
offered,” he added.
O’Brien said the lack of liquidity on regional
markets was also a barrier to secure more
regional supplies and conceded that Ukraine’s
own export ban had a negative impact on
companies, such as DTEK, looking to build
regional portfolios.
Gas13-Jun-2025
Energy markets price in increased risk
following Israeli strikes on Iran but impact on
fundamentals limited
Retaliation from Iran highly likely, strong
response expected given Israeli attack severity
But energy market participants cautious on
longer-term escalation risks, citing regional
examples of geopolitical tension with limited
lasting price impact
Brent crude would need to near $100/bbl for
oil-linked LNG contracts to match current LNG
spot market prices
Unfolding situation further supports
already bullish picture for coming months
across energy markets
In the early hours of 13 June, Israel
launched a wave of attacks targeting Iran’s
nuclear programme, with strikes on nuclear
infrastructure as well as the killing of
scientists and military figures. Iran’s foreign
minister called the attacks a “declaration of
war” and vowed to retaliate.
ICIS experts share views on the potential
next steps and the future impact across the
energy complex.
Did the strike
take energy markets by surprise?
(Matthew Jones, Head of Power
Analytics) An Israeli strike on Iran’s
nuclear capabilities has been a significant
market risk for many months. Back in January,
we predicted this occurrence
in 2025. While there had not been much sign
of an impending attack in the first few months
of the year, there were reports in late May
that Israel was preparing a move, while the US
began to pull staff out of the Middle East on
Tuesday 10 June, after news emerged that
strikes could be
imminent. The exact timing was not clear,
but markets were aware of rapidly increasing
risk.
What price impact have we seen so far
across the commodity complex?
(Gemma Blundell-Doyle, Crude Market
Reporter) Oil prices spiked by almost 10%
on Friday morning, to their highest since
January this year. Brent crude reached
$78.48/barrel at 03:41 London time. At 14:30 it
remained elevated at $74.33/barrel.
(Rob Dalton, Senior Gas Market
Reporter) European gas prices rose on
Friday morning with the ICIS TTF front-month up
6% to €38.50 ($44.30)/MWh, a three-month high.
(Anna Coulson, Senior Power Market
Reporter) Bullish European gas supported
power prices, with the German front month
rising 2.2% from Thursday’s close to €82.75/MWh
by 13:50 on Friday.
(Ed Cox, Global LNG Editor) East Asian
LNG (ICIS EAX) spot prices rose 8% on Friday to
$13.43/MMBtu, the highest since March. Asian
spot prices have been increasing since early
June, in line with a firmer ICIS TTF.
Global gas price
forward curves 13 June 2025, Source: ICIS,
CME
Is the price impact risk-based, or have
we seen a direct impact on fundamentals so
far?
(Gemma Blundell-Doyle) Oil
fundamentals were on Friday afternoon
unchanged. The National Iranian Oil Refining
and Distribution Company said refining and
storage facilities had not been damaged and
continued to operate.
(Rob Dalton) The immediate,
price-driven response across the TTF was
fuelled by rising risk premiums and speculative
positioning, with particular concern
surrounding the shutdown of Israel’s offshore
gas fields. Market participants remain cautious
about the longer-term risks of escalation, with
many pointing to the 2024 Israel-Iran conflict
as an example of geopolitical tension with
limited lasting impact on pricing.
(Ed Cox) No immediate fundamental LNG
impact with outright spot LNG demand limited
from key Asian buyers, partly due to market
prices sitting well above oil-linked LNG
contracts.
LNG buyers closely monitor oil prices, which
are still used to price most Asian LNG
procurement. Most oil-linked contracts take a
historic oil price of at least three months
previous, so higher Brent today would impact
LNG contracts later in the year. Brent would
need to go closer to $100/bbl for oil-linked
LNG contracts to match current LNG spot prices
and to encourage buyers to switch to more spot
offtake.
ICIS understands that Egyptian fertilizer
producers have already shut down at least three
urea plants because of measures taken by Israel
to temporarily halt gas production. Israel
supplies over 30 million cubic metres/day of
gas to Egypt, which already faces major supply
shortages. Any extended reduction in Israeli
gas supply could mean Egypt has to buy
additional LNG cargoes to cover the shortage.
Egypt has recently committed to buy what could
be close to 10 million tonnes of LNG in 2025
and 2026 from a variety of sellers through
large tenders. It may call on the market for
additional cargoes which in turn could further
support global spot prices.
What next?
(Matthew Jones) You could see
different levels of response from Iran. The
least consequential would be similar to the
events of April 2024 playing out again, in
which Iran fires missiles and drones at Israel,
which shoots most of them down. Given Iran’s
weak position this cannot be ruled out.
But it seems more likely that Iran will attempt
a stronger response given the severity of the
Israeli attack. That could include attacks on
targets in the Persian Gulf, including on
tankers or oil refineries.
Iran could conclude that creating energy market
turbulence is the best way to get the US to
restrain Israeli action.
The most consequential response would be the
closing of the Straits of Hormuz through which
massive volumes of global oil and LNG travel.
Such an event would have major bullish
consequences for global energy markets but
should be seen as low probability as Iran will
be very reluctant to alienate key allies like
China. It would also be physically very
difficult for Iran to close the Strait even if
it wanted to.
(Ed Cox) For LNG, the narrative around
a potential Straits of Hormuz closure will
return, even if this would represent a major
further escalation from Iran with little
clarity on practical implementation.
Almost 20% of global LNG production will pass
through Hormuz from Qatar and the UAE in 2025
so the global LNG market will naturally focus
closely on events. LNG and wider shipping flows
via the nearby Suez Canal remain constrained
due to the risk of attack and there is limited
scope for a major impact on LNG shipping given
the large number of new vessels coming to the
market which is suppressing charter rates.
But we should expect major LNG buyers to
analyse current stocks and review emergency
supply security plans in response to these
events.
Global LNG exports and share of
trade using the Strait of Hormuz. Source:
ICIS
(Andreas Schroeder, Head of Gas
Analytics) A wider Middle East conflict
could have serious implications for Egyptian
gas markets. The country has switched to
becoming an importer of LNG since 2024 and is
set to increase imports going forward.
A major buy tender was issued recently. There
is now talk of around 100-110 cargos needed
overall in 2025 instead of the previously
expected 60-70. We forecast 6.3 million tonnes
of LNG imports, nearly tripling the 2.4 million
tonnes of 2024.
Egypt also receives LNG via pipeline from
Jordan’s Aqaba import terminal, which imported
0.8 million tonnes in 2024. In addition, Israel
is a major pipeline supplier to Egypt with
around 10 bcm/year covering a fifth of Egyptian
demand. Should a regional conflict escalate
further, an extended stop of Israeli gas
exports to Egypt could imply even stronger LNG
intake into Egypt for the remainder of 2025.
Egyptian LNG imports. Source:
ICIS
(Gemma) The US and Iran are set to
meet in Oman on 15 June to continue ongoing
nuclear talks. The Israeli strike on Iran will
be on the agenda. US president Trump has urged
Iran to make a deal regarding its nuclear
programme and to prevent further attacks from
Israel, bit it is unlikely Iran will concede
without retaliation.
Where could commodity prices go in
coming days and weeks?
(Ajay Parmar, Director, Energy &
Refining) We expect Iran to retaliate and
tensions to escalate further. This will likely
cause oil prices to remain elevated for the
coming weeks. If a resolution is found later
this month, prices could begin to retreat, but
for now, we see them remaining elevated in June
and July as a result of this escalation.
(Ed Cox) The TTF is ever more
influenced by geopolitical events given
Europe’s dependency on LNG imports. Often, TTF
volatility does not match changes in regional
gas fundamentals as traders are changing
positions to consider wider macro views. It is
possible the TTF could swing by 5-10% daily
while uncertainty over further escalation
continues.
Even though oil pricing plays a limited role in
European gas price formulation, it is likely
the TTF would follow higher Brent in the
context of an overall bullish energy market.
(Rob Dalton) Even before recent
developments, the near-term outlook for
European gas markets had already tilted bullish
due to a summer injection demand gap. An
escalating conflict would heighten the risk of
a broader move higher across the entire near
curve, placing increased emphasis on refilling
storage sites in the near term.
How does the news impact your broader
view of the current energy market
complex?
(Matthew Jones) We held a webinar on
12 June in which we presented a bullish view
for the European energy commodity complex in H2
2025. We see significant upside risk to prices
in the coming months, stemming from
expectations for rising carbon prices, gas
storage targets shifting volume risk to winter,
the potential continuation of low wind speeds
and fears over the return of stress corrosion
issues at French reactors.
The Israeli attack on Iran and the potential
consequences we have outlined here further
support that bullish picture for the coming
months.
(Ed Cox) From an LNG perspective, the
fundamental outlook from Asia is not strong in
the short term, largely due to weak economic
performance from China. European gas looks more
bullish. But the correlation between the TTF
and Asian spot LNG is strong with the potential
for prices in both markets to rise further on
Middle East concerns, even if the immediate
fundamental impact is focused on Israeli gas
supply to Egypt.
Speciality Chemicals13-Jun-2025
BARCELONA (ICIS)–The worst chemicals downturn
in living memory is forcing ratings agencies to
downgrade more companies, raising fears
of bankruptcies.
Chemical company earnings have been
bottom-of-cycle since 2023
Leverage (borrowing) is high compared to
historical levels
Low earnings increase pressure on leverage,
raises risk of default
Fitch has downgraded more chemical
companies over last 12-18 months
Extended trough in chemicals may lead to
bankruptcies
Operating rates have not recovered as they
did after Global Financial Crisis
Fitch expects gradual recovery from 2026
A lot more closures needed to rebalance
market
Ratings agencies look at company costs,
strategies and compare to peers
Diversification of geography and product
helps manage risk
In this Think Tank podcast, Will
Beacham interviews Guillaume
Daguerre who leads Europe chemicals
for ratings agency Fitch, John
Richardson from the ICIS market
development team, ICIS Insight Editor
Tom Brown and Paul
Hodges, chairman of New Normal
Consulting.
Click here to register for the
ICIS/European Association of Chemical
Distributors (Fecc) distributors CEO round
table on Monday 16 June.
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.

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Speciality Chemicals13-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Europe chemicals stocks and
equities markets fell in morning trading on
Friday in the wake of Israel’s missile strikes
across Iran, including nuclear facilities, with
the prospect of additional attacks chilling
sentiment.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
confirmed on Friday that Iran’s Natanz nuclear
enrichment facility had been struck in the
first salvo of strikes that also hit
residential areas as part of attacks on
military leaders and nuclear scientists.
Israel’s Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu,
stated on Friday that strikes will continue
“for as many days as it takes” to remove
nuclear enrichment facilities, as US Secretary
of State Marco Rubio urged the Iranian
government not to respond.
The IAEA noted on Thursday that Iran is
potentially in breach of its non
nuclear-proliferation agreements for the first
time since the early 2000s, but Rafael Mariano
Grossi, director general of the nuclear
watchdog, attacked the strikes on Friday.
“Nuclear facilities must never be attacked,
regardless of the context or circumstances,” he
said, noting that there is presently no
elevation at the Natanz site.
MARKETS
Oil prices soared in the wake of the strikes,
with Brent crude futures jumping nearly
$5/barrel on Friday to $74.31/barrel, the
highest level since April, while WTI futures
were trading at $73.15/barrel, the highest
since January.
Equities slumped as commodities surged, with
Asia bourses universally closing in the red and
all key European stock indices trading down in
morning trading.
The STOXX 600 chemicals index was trading down
over 1% as of 10:30 BST, in line with general
markets, with stock prices for a third of the
21 component companies down 2-3%.
The hardest-hit were Fuchs, LANXESS and
Umicore, which saw stocks fall 3.72%, 3.24% and
2.97% compared to Thursday’s close.
The situation has also had a dramatic impact on
fertilizers markets, with Iran a key global
exporter of urea, and some contacts reporting
disruption in Israel’s supply of gas to Egypt.
SHIPPING
Shipping could also face further disruption,
with the UK’s Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO)
monitor publishing an advisory on Wednesday –
before the start of the Israel strikes –
that increased Middle East military activity
could impact on mariners.
“Vessels are advised to transit the Arabian
Gulf, Gulf of Oman and Straits of Hormuz with
caution,” the watchdog said.
Around 20% of global oil trade passes through
along the Strait of Hormuz, and any move by
Iran to block the route could have a huge
impact on freight traffic that is still
disrupted by firms avoiding the Red Sea in the
wake of Houthi strikes.
Activity in the Red Sea is understood to have
subsided in recent weeks after a US-Houthi
ceasefire but shipping firms remain leery of
the route, and the attacks on Iran could
further inflame tensions in the region.
Higher risk and insurance price hikes could
also drive shipping prices through the region
steadily higher.
The upward movement for shipping prices had
showed signs of plateauing this week, with
China-Europe and China-US route charge steady
week on week as of 12 June after weeks of
surges, according to Drewry Supply Chain
Advisors.
Some freight indices continued to climb,
however, with the Baltic Exchange’s dry bulk
sea freight index up 9.6% as of 12 June, the
highest level since October 2024.
Focus article by Tom
Brown
Thumbnail image: Iran Tehran Israel Strike
– 13 June 2025. Iran’s IRIB state TV reported
explosions in areas of the capital of Tehran
and counties of Natanz, Khondab and
Khorramabad. (Xinhua/Shutterstock)
Crude Oil13-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–The EU’s trade surplus fell in
April from the previous month, driven down by a
sharp decline in the chemicals sector.
The EU’s April trade balance fell to €7.4
billion, down from €35.5 billion in March,
official data showed on Friday.
“This drop was primarily driven by the
contraction of the chemicals sector surplus,
which fell from €41.6 billion to €20.4 billion
– a reduction of over 50%,” statistics agency
Eurostat said in a statement.
Source:
Eurostat
In the eurozone, the trade surplus fell in
April to €9.9 billion, down from €37.3 billion
in March. Chemicals almost halved to €22.1
billion from €42.8 billion.
On a year-on-year basis, the April trade
surplus was lower in both blocs but by a lesser
magnitude, attributed to declines in the
machineries and vehicles sector.
The EU chemicals trade balance was slightly
higher in April, increasing to €20.4 billion
from €19.5 billion in the same month of 2024.
Source:
Eurostat
Prices for Europe chemicals fell
in April on weak demand and uncertainty
over US
trade tariffs.
Ethanol12-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–US railroad Norfolk Southern
has advised customers that it will increase
demurrage and storage charges for railcars in
its yards to $110/railcar from $60/railcar,
according to a customer notice on its website.
The notice said that there will be no changes
made to the existing service credit program.
“This adjustment reflects our ongoing
commitment to maintaining a safe, efficient,
and reliable service – particularly in the
handling and transport of hazardous materials,”
the railroad said.
Norfolk Southern said the increase will help
support enhancements to the fluid movement of
cargo.
“A fluid, well-optimized network ensures that
shipments move more predictably and reliably,
minimizing delays and maximizing the
availability of equipment when and where it’s
needed most,” the railroad said.
Some market participants suspect that other
railroads could follow with similar increases
on growing concerns of stagnant inventory on
rail networks.
DELAYS SEEN FROM CPKC
CUTOVERChemical market
participants on the CPKC system saw significant
delays moving material in east Texas,
Louisiana, and parts of Mississippi in May
because of issues merging its operations system
following the merger between Canadian pacific
and Kansas City Southern in 2023.
Speaking at the Wells Fargo Industrials &
Materials Conference on Tuesday, CPKC chief
operating officer Mark Redd acknowledged that
there were issues with the cutover in those
areas.
Redd said some customers felt the brunt of some
first-mile/last-mile customer service during
the cutover.
A market participant told ICIS that the issue
caused delays and impacted shipments severely
and affected the tracking of ethylene glycol
(EG) shipments.
Ammonia12-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US Department of
Agriculture (USDA) is forecasting lower
beginning and ending corn stocks and left
soybean supply and use unchanged in the June
World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimate
(WASDE) report.
For the corn, crop area and yield forecast are
unchanged with planted area at 95.3 million
acres and yield of 181.0 bushels per acre.
The next update on area and yield will come
when the USDA releases its acreage report on 30
June.
The monthly update stated that beginning corn
stocks are down 50 million bushels reflecting a
forecast increase in exports for 2024-2025.
The agency said exports are raised 50 million
bushels, based on reported US Census Bureau
shipments through the month of April,
inspection data during the month of May, and
current outstanding sales.
Corn ending stocks are lowered 50 million
bushels to 1.8 billion bushels.
The season-average farm price is unchanged at
$4.20 per bushel.
For soybeans the June WASDE had no changes on
supply and use.
The US season-average soybean price remains
forecasted at $10.25 per bushel.
The next WASDE report will be released on 11
July.
Methanol12-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–OCI Global has secured US
regulatory clearance for the $2.05 billion sale
of its methanol business to Methanex,
representing the last approval needed for the
deal to move forward, the Netherlands-based
producer said on Thursday.
Methanex had originally agreed to acquire the
business in September 2024,
encompassing OCI’s Us and European methanol
production assets.
The deal is expected to close on 27 June,
subject to closing conditions, OCI said.
Under the definitive agreement with OCI, the
$2.05 billion purchase price will consist of
$1.15 billion in cash, the issuance of 9.9
million common shares of Methanex valued at
$450 million – based on a $45 per share price –
and the assumption of $450 million in debt and
leases.
OCI is expected to become the second largest
shareholder in Methanex following the
transaction, owning about 13% of its shares.
The company’s methanol arm operates a facility
in Beaumont, Texas, with annual production
capacity of 910,000 tonnes of methanol and
340,000 tonnes of ammonia, as well as s 50%
interest in another Beaumont site co-run with
Proman.
The deal also includes a 1 million tonne/year
methanol facility in Delfzijl, Netherlands,
currently not in production due to unfavourable
natural gas pricing, and OCI’s HyFuels
business.
Speciality Chemicals12-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–After two years of decline,
Germany’s GDP could start growing again in
2025, economic research institutes said on
Thursday.
Although the trade and tariff conflicts are
still weighing on export demand, billions of
euros of planned
government spending on infrastructure and
defense would start supporting growth, they
said.
“Leading indicators support our view that,
after two years of contraction, the industrial
sector has reached the trough, albeit at a low
level,” said Stefan Kooths, head of forecasting
at the Kiel Institute for the World Economy
(IfW Kiel).
The recovery would be largely driven by
domestic factors, with private consumption and
corporate investment picking up after a
two-year drought, he said.
IfW Kiel noted that “significantly greater
fiscal room” for the
new federal government under Chancellor
Friedrich Merz should help drive growth.
Germany recently
amended its constitution to enable more
debt-financed spending.
IfW Kiel revised its GDP growth forecast for
Europe’s largest economy to 0.3% for 2025, from
its previous expectation of zero growth, and
for 2026 it expects GDP growth of 1.6%.
However, it warned that the “erratic” US tariff
policy was fueling uncertainty for Germany’s
foreign trade.
In addition, German exporters were hampered by
“significantly reduced competitiveness”, it
said.
Another institute, ifo Munich, now forecasts
0.3% GDP growth in 2025, up from its earlier
0.2% projection, and it predicts 1.5% growth
for 2026, up from its previous 0.8% assessment.
After reaching its low point in the winter,
Germany’s economy is now set for a “growth
spurt”, partly driven by the government fiscal
measures, ifo said.
However, like IfW Kiel, ifo warned of the risks
posed by US trade policies.
The US import tariffs already imposed – and
assuming they remain at the current level –
would impact Germany’s economic growth by 0.1
percentage points in 2025 and 0.3 percentage
points in 2026, ifo said.
If a US-EU trade agreement is reached, growth
in Germany could be higher, whereas an
escalation could lead to a renewed recession,
ifo said.
A third institute, the Halle Institute for
Economic Research (IWH), said if the US does
not escalate its trade conflicts further,
Germany’s GDP could grow by 0.4% in 2025, up
from IWH’s previous 0.1% growth forecast.
IWH also noted that the slow licensing for
exports of rare earths from China has led to a
shortage that is threatening production in
parts of Germany’s manufacturing industry.
In Germany’s chemical industry, producers’
trade group VCI currently expects chemical
production (excluding pharmaceuticals) to fall
by 2.0% this year.
Please also visit
US tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals
and energy
Thumbnail photo of Chancellor Friedrich Merz
(Source: Christian Democratic Union
party)
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