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Ethylene30-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 27 June.
INSIGHT: Iran conflict adds to
growing risk premium paid by
chems
The growing conflict over Iran’s nuclear
program is part of a larger trend of
heightened geopolitical risk that will likely
persist for years, increasing costs for
chemical companies while lowering growth.
SHIPPING: Asia-US container rates
plunge as June hikes fail to
stick
Rates for shipping containers from Asia to
the US are plummeting this week as general
rate increases (GRIs) that took effect on 1
June failed to hold.
Brazil’s chemicals operating rates
keep falling despite protectionist
measures
Brazil’s chemicals production posted its
worst performance in over three decades
during Q1 2025, with operating rates at 62% –
down from 65% in the same quarter of 2024 –
and production falling by nearly 4%,
chemicals producers’ trade group Abiquim said
on Wednesday.
TRUCKING: US May volumes tick lower
as industry copes with effects of trade
war
The US trucking industry saw slightly lower
volumes moved in May as negative consequences
of tariff effects are beginning to emerge,
according to industry analysts.
Canadian auto firms must look at all
options to counter tariff challenge –
lawyers
Canadian auto industry companies must
consider all options – from shifting
production to the US to preparing for
bankruptcy – as they face uncertainties posed
by US tariffs, lawyers at Toronto-based law
firm Torys said in a webinar.
US HB Fuller raises guidance on
self-help, not stronger
economy
US-based adhesives producer HB Fuller raised
its guidance because of the success of its
focus on pricing, cost cutting and portfolio
management and not because it sees signs that
it will get any additional help from the
economy.
US, China to further ease ethane,
rare earth trade
restrictions
The US and China have made further progress
on easing trade restrictions that each
country had imposed on shipments of ethane
and rare earth products.
Speciality Chemicals30-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended
27 June.
Spain’s Fertiberia
presses ahead with layoffs despite 10-day
strike actionFertiberia
will push ahead with layoffs affecting 54 of
its workers and will carry out negotiations
to maintain the “sustainability” of its
operations, the Spanish fertilizers producer
told ICIS this weekend.
INSIGHT: Long supply,
weak pre-summer demand to drive most Europe
chemicals prices down in
JuneThe majority of
European petrochemical prices are expected to
decline in June, driven by long supply and
few signs of seasonal demand uptick.
SABIC confirms
permanent closure of Wilton, UK cracker, LDPE
will continue to runSaudi
producer SABIC has confirmed it will not
restart its Olefins 6 cracker based at
Wilton, UK ending several months of “Will it,
won’t it?” speculation.
INSIGHT: No major
near-term recovery expected for MX and PX in
EuropeDemand for mixed
xylenes (MX) and paraxylene (PX) in Europe
has been limited from the start of 2025, with
no sign of recovery in the near term.
Volatile feedstocks
drive European refinery solvents
marketsEuropean refinery
solvents markets players have their work cut
out this month trying to keep up with
feedstock changes, with volatile June costs
to feed into July pricing targets.
Ethylene30-Jun-2025
TORONTO (ICIS)–Canada and the US have agreed
to resume trade negotiations with a view
towards reaching a deal by 21 July, Canada’s
finance ministry announced late on Sunday (29
June).
The announcement came after US President Donald
Trump said on 27 June that the US was
terminating with immediate effect all trade
discussions with Canada, and he threatened to
impose new tariffs against Canada to protest
that nation’s digital services tax (DST).
Canada’s finance ministry said in a statement
that the government decided to rescind the tax
“in anticipation of a mutually beneficial
comprehensive trade arrangement with the United
States.”
In line with the revocation of the tax, “Prime
Minister Carney and President Trump have agreed
that parties will resume negotiations with a
view towards agreeing on a deal by 21 July
2025,” the ministry said.
The tax came into force on 28 June 2024 and
collection was scheduled to begin on 30 June
2025.
A trade agreement is important for Canada’s
chemical industry, which in 2024 exported
Canadian dollar (C$) $55.6 billion ($40.6
billion) worth of chemicals and chemical
products, with 77% of those exports going to
the US, according to data from trade group
Chemistry Industry Association of Canada
(CIAC).
($1 = C$1.37)
Additional reporting by Al
Greenwood
Please also visit the ICIS topic
page: US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy

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Hydrogen30-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s expansion of its
carbon market and the EU’s implementation of
Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) are
reshaping the landscape for high-emission
industries. Steel, aluminum, and cement are
under increasing pressure to decarbonize, and
hydrogen is emerging as a strategic solution.
In this podcast, ICIS analysts Patricia Tao and
Lewis Unstead compare China and Europe’s
approaches to decarbonizing heavy industry, and
discuss the role of hydrogen in this
transformation.
China expands ETS to heavy industries,
covering 60% of national carbon emissions
EU’s CBAM revision delays cost phase,
sharpens carbon price signals for global
exporters
Hydrogen pilots advance in steel, cement,
aluminium—but scale-up faces major economic
barriers
Both China and EU face similar hurdles in
hydrogen application —high costs,
infrastructure gaps, and subsidy dependency
Gas30-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Here are the top stories
from ICIS News Asia and the Middle East for
the week ended 27 June.
Asia petrochemical
shares fall; oil rises as US enters
Israel-Iran war
By Nurluqman Suratman 23-Jun-25 13:05
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asia’s petrochemical shares
dipped while oil prices rose on Monday, after
the US bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities,
raising fears of retaliation from Tehran
which could disrupt global oil supplies.
Oil
dips 2.2% after Trump’s claim of Iran-Israel
ceasefire
By Jonathan Yee 24-Jun-25 10:44 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Oil prices dipped below the
$70/barrel mark on Tuesday after US President
Donald Trump unilaterally declared a
ceasefire in the Iran-Israel conflict, which
he dubbed a “12-day war”.
China petchem futures
track oil price tumble on easing geopolitical
crisis
By Fanny Zhang 24-Jun-25 11:52 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–China’s petrochemical futures plunged
on Tuesday, tracking the sharp retreat in
crude oil as US President Donald Trump’s
announcement of an Iran-Israel ceasefire
eased fears of supply disruptions.
UPDATE: Crude falls
$2/bbl; Trump says Israel-Iran ceasefire
takes effect
By Jonathan Yee 24-Jun-25 16:05 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Oil prices declined by more than
$2/barrel on Tuesday afternoon in Asia, as US
President Donald Trump said that the
Israel-Iran ceasefire – which was confirmed
by Israel – is now in effect.
S
Korea’s GS Caltex launches study for biofuel
plant in Indonesia recycling palm oil
waste
By Jonathan Yee 25-Jun-25 13:15 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–South Korean oil refiner GS Caltex
will launch a feasibility study for a project
in Indonesia aimed at producing biofuel by
processing palm oil mill waste, the company
said on 24 June.
INSIGHT: China could
become net PP exporter after three months of
exporter status
By Lucy Shuai 25-Jun-25 17:49 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–China’s polypropylene (PP) has
maintained a net exporter status for three
consecutive months from March to May 2025.
With the continuous increase in domestic
supply, China’s PP may turn into a net
exporter this year.
Asian naphtha supply
concerns ease, but not entirely
gone
By Li Peng Seng 26-Jun-25 11:26 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia’s naphtha intermonth spread rose
this week, driven by concerns over Middle
Eastern supplies although the situation has
somewhat stabilized following a ceasefire
between Iran and Israel.
India methanol prices
to correct as Iran-Israel conflict tensions
ease
By Damini Dabholkar 26-Jun-25 13:43 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Prices of methanol in India corrected
sharply on Wednesday after the ceasefire
between Iran and Israel began.
Asia, Mideast
petrochemical markets weigh Iran-Israel
ceasefire, looming tariffs
By Jonathan Yee 27-Jun-25 12:31 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–The Asia and Middle East chemical
markets are grappling with a volatile mix of
geopolitical developments, tariff
uncertainties, and a persistent supply
overhang against a backdrop of subdued
demand.
Potassium Chloride (MOP)27-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US is threatening to impose
tariffs against Canada in the next seven days
to protest the nation’s digital services tax,
US President Donald Trump said on Friday.
Canada’s digital services tax
goes into effect on Saturday.
“Based on this egregious Tax, we are hereby
terminating ALL discussions on Trade with
Canada, effective immediately,” Trump said on
social media. “We will let Canada know the
Tariff that they will be paying to do business
with the United States of America within the
next seven day period.”
The US and Canada reached an agreement earlier
this year, under which they would not impose
tariffs on goods that comply with the nation’s
trade deal, known as the US-Mexico-Canada
Agreement (USMCA).
Canada exports large amounts of plastics and
chemicals to the US, especially to the northern
border states that are far from the
petrochemical plants along the Gulf Coast.
Canada also exports large amounts of potash and
crude oil to the US.
Ethylene27-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US and China have made
further progress on easing trade restrictions
that each country had imposed on shipments of
ethane and rare earth products.
A spokesperson for China’s Ministry of Commerce
said on Friday that the two countries have
further confirmed the details of a framework
they had earlier reached in London about the
trade restrictions.
In the latest development, China will review
and approve export applications of controlled
items that satisfy the country’s conditions,
according to a translation of the
spokesperson’s comments. Accordingly, the US
will cancel a series of restrictive measures.
The ministry did not specify the products that
are subject to the latest development of the
trade restrictions.
However, past comments and media reports
indicated that China had restricted shipments
to the US of magnets made of rare earth
elements, which had the potential to disrupt US
production of automobiles. The US had imposed
restrictions on shipments to China of jet
engines, chip software and ethane.
The US has recently loosened its
restrictions on ethane shipments to China.
However, it is not allowing companies to
complete the shipments by off-loading the
ethane to customers in China.
It is unclear if the latest development between
China and the US will allow such unloading to
take place in the future.
At present, five producers in China’s coastal
areas are fed with ethane and propane,
including Lianyungang Petrochemical (Satellite
Chemical), Wanhua Chemical, SP Chemicals,
Ningbo Huatai Shengfu and Sanjiang Chemical.
Satellite is particularly exposed to
import restrictions because its crackers rely
solely on ethane.
The US is the only country in the world that
exports ethane overseas. If the US continues to
restrict ethane shipments, China cannot find
another source.
US, CHINESE TRADE TENSIONS SPREAD TO
EXPORT RESTRICTIONSTensions
between the US and China have spread from
tariffs to trade restrictions, under which each
country requires licenses before they would
allow the export of certain products that they
deem could be used for military purposes.
Earlier in 2024, China imposed restrictions on
exports to the US of antimony, a catalyst used
by producers of polyethylene terephthalate
(PET).
On 4 February, it restricted
exports of tungsten, tellurium,
bismuth metal, indium and molybdenum.
Bismuth is used to make catalysts for
polyurethanes and for acrylonitrile (ACN) in
the SOHIO process. Bismuth is also used to make
radiopaque additives, which make plastics
visible under x-ray.
It is unclear if the London framework reached
by China and the US covers exports of bismuth
and antimony.
Thumbnail Photo: Polyethylene, which is
made from ethylene that can be derived from
ethane. (Image by ICIS)
Ethylene26-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–US-based adhesives producer HB
Fuller raised its guidance because of the
success of its focus on pricing, cost cutting
and portfolio management and not because it
sees signs that it will get any additional help
from the economy.
“Looking ahead, we expect a continued
challenging operating environment characterized
by a high level of uncertainty and constrained
demand. Also, while the dollar has recently
weakened, we expect currencies to remain
unpredictable,” HB Fuller CEO Celeste Mastin
said. She made her comments
during an earnings conference call. “Our
assumption is that volumes will be constrained
for the remainder of the year.”
The company’s new guidance expects slightly
weaker volumes in the second half of the year,
Mastin said. Profits and margins will grow,
however, because of pricing actions and raw
material purchasing leverage.
HB Fuller is typically the first major
US-listed chemical company to release its
results during the earnings season, as its
fiscal year runs through November. As a result,
HB Fuller’s comments provide a preview about
the trends that other chemical companies could
discuss during their earnings presentations.
When companies discussed Q1 earnings earlier in
2025, they had discounted any help that
macroeconomics could have on their performance.
Instead, any growth in profits would have to
come from self-help measures like pricing and
cost cutting.
While HB Fuller is just one company, its
comments show that, so far, that trend is
holding, and self-help will likely play a large
role in companies’ performance during the
earnings season.
After HB Fuller revealed its higher earnings
guidance, its shares rose by nearly 11% on
Thursday.
The following table shows HB Fuller’s latest
earnings guidance and compares it
with its previous forecast. Figures are in
millions of dollars.
Current
Previous
Revenue
Down 2-3%
Down 2-4%
Organic Revenue
0-2%
0-2%
Adjusted EBITDA
615-630
600-625
Source: HB Fuller
LIMITED TARIFF
EXPOSUREHB Fuller had adopted a
strategy of producing in the same regions from
which it sells to its customers, which
strengthens customer service and limits its
exposure to tariffs, Mastin said.
Overall, 97% of what HB Fuller makes is sold in
the same region, she said. In the US, the
figure is 99%. In China, it is 96%.
For those parts of HB Fuller’s business that
are exposed to tariffs, the company will
address it through sourcing and pricing.
The larger question that HB Fuller and other
chemical companies have is the effect that
tariffs will have on volumes.
“The way we look at that is we need to be
prepared for potentially lower volumes given
potentially more constrained economies,” Mastin
said.
END MARKET SNAPSHOTAs a
global adhesives producer, HB Fuller serves
many of the same end markets as upstream
commodity chemical producers. Many of its
applications go into packaging, construction,
automobiles and electronics. HB Fuller is also
exposed to the solar industry.
HB Fuller selling adhesives to more
applications within the automotive sector,
particularly in Asia Pacific.
In the past, its adhesives had been used in
interior trim of automobiles, Mastin said.
These are expanding to exterior trim,
powertrains, sealing applications and thermal
management for batteries and braking systems.
The company is benefiting from the trend of
automobile producers adding more electronics to
their vehicles, Mastin said.
HB Fuller also noted strength in medical
applications. The company has gained share in
flexible packaging.
Its electronics business continues to take
market share.
Mastin noted wins in aerospace and defense in
the US, particularly in radar assemblies,
pressure sensors, tires and fighter jet
fiber-optic communications.
Demand from residential construction remains
slow, but this end market makes up less than 6%
of HB Fuller’s revenue. Roofing remains strong.
Demand for adhesives from solar panel producers
had fallen because of overcapacity in the
industry. HB Fuller has been responding to this
weakness by targeting more differentiated
applications within the solar industry
HB Fuller noticed a temporary pause in exports
from China during Q2, and that could extend for
a couple more months, Mastin said. After that,
volumes should improve because of new designs
being introduced by electronics producers.
During Q2, HB Fuller saw weakness from
end-of-line packaging and beverage labelling
applications
Costs for raw materials continue to decline,
but they remain higher from year-ago levels,
Mastin said. HB Fuller responded by
reallocating raw materials to different
suppliers during Q1. Those moves should have an
effect on the company through the second half
of its fiscal year.
As an adhesives producer, HB Fuller’s raw
materials include tackifying resins, polymers,
synthetic rubber, plasticizers and vinyl
acetate monomer (VAM).
The company’s adhesives are used in
construction, packaging, automobiles and other
end markets shared by many plastics and
chemicals.
Thumbnail Photo: Adhesive. (Image by
Shutterstock)
Speciality Chemicals26-Jun-2025
TORONTO (ICIS)–Canadian auto industry
companies must consider all options – from
shifting production to the US to preparing for
bankruptcy – as they face uncertainties posed
by US tariffs, lawyers at Toronto-based law
firm Torys said in a webinar.
The auto industry is a key end market for the
chemical and plastics industries, with shifts
or changes in one sector impacting the other.
In Canada, the auto industry “matters, it
matters a lot,” said lawyers Adam Slavens and
Ryan Lax, and went on to note that the industry
generates more than Canadian dollar (C$) $100
billion (US$73 billion) in annual revenue and
contributes more than C$19 billion to GDP.
Slavens and Lax said tariffs were a “blunt
tool” for US President Donald Trump to use in
trying to shift auto manufacturing from Canada
and Mexico to the US.
The north American auto industry is integrated,
and it would take the US years to expand plants
or build new ones and set up the required
supply chains, they said.
However, Canadian-based auto and parts
companies could not just hunker down and hope
that the next president will reverse course
after Trump’s term ends in early 2029, they
said.
The thrust of Trump’s policies will likely
last, and the tariff and trade issues have
become “a new normal” as the US consensus
around free trade has weakened, they said.
As it stands, although USMCA-compliant autos
and auto parts made in Canada can, for the time
being, continue to enter the US tariff-free, no
final deal has been reached, creating
uncertainty that makes it hard to make
investment decisions, they said.
There was a “fundamental uncertainty” over the
outcome of the tariff dispute and the
re-negotiations of the US-Mexico-Canada (USMCA)
trade deal, they added.
The questions facing decision makers in the
auto industry today were “Where to build the
next plant? Where to spend the next investment
dollar, in the US or Canada?” – decisions that
were hard to make given the level of
uncertainty, they said.
“Folks don’t know how to plan for their
businesses, in view of the uncertainty and the
unpredictability, there are no clear rules of
the game that folks can be assured will apply
for the coming five or ten years,” Lax added.
MITIGATION
The lawyers suggested a number of measures for
Canadian-based auto firms to mitigate or
withstand the impacts of tariffs, including:
Shift some production to the US.
Review intra-company transfer pricing to
reduce tariff liabilities.
Become indispensable by focusing on niche
components neither a US nor a Mexican
competitor can offer.
Expand outside of North America, although
this was a “difficult proposition” given that
the European auto industry has its “own
issues”.
Review supply chain contracts, on the “very
good assumption” that someone in the supply
chain will have “an issue, at some point” over
the near or long term.
Review contracts with customers or
suppliers to determine liability for tariff
costs.
Consider force majeure, renegotiate or
terminate contracts.
Include forced majeure clauses covering
tariff risks in new contracts.
For the time being, hold back on spending
and avoid capital investments, to improve cash
flow.
Avoid hiring new employees.
If the business is already in “a greater
degree of distress”, consider restructuring
under Canada’s Companies’ Creditors Arrangement
Act (CCAA).
Furthermore, firms should apply for
“remissions” or exemptions from Canadian
retaliatory tariffs, the lawyers said.
Trump’s primary aim seems to be to keep Chinese
vehicles out of the market, the lawyers said,
citing remarks by the US ambassador to Canada
on 25 June during a webinar that Slavens and
Lax attended.
The US wants an integrated north American auto
manufacturing industry, the ambassador stated,
and he said “there can’t not be a deal with
Canada”, according to the lawyers.
As such, a US-Canada trade deal should be a
matter of time and the uncertainties would
eventually go away – although Canada might end
up with less auto investments than
historically, they said.
Once there is more clarity, private equity
firms may step in and build an investment
thesis around Canada’s remaining auto industry,
they added.
AUTOS AND CHEMICALS
The automotive industry is a major global
consumer of petrochemicals that contribute more
than one-third of the raw material costs of an
average vehicle.
The automotive sector drives demand for
chemicals, such as polypropylene (PP), along
with nylon, polystyrene (PS), styrene butadiene
rubber (SBR), polyurethane (PU), methyl
methacrylate (MMA) and polymethyl methacrylate
(PMMA).
Demand for chemicals in auto production comes
from, for example, antifreeze and other fluids,
catalysts, plastic dashboards and other
components, rubber tires and hoses, upholstery
fibers, coatings and adhesives, according to
Kevin Swift, ICIS Senior Economist for Global
Chemicals.
Virtually every component of a light vehicle,
from the front bumper to the rear taillights,
features some chemistry, with the latest data
indicate that polymer use is about 423 pounds
(192kg) per vehicle, Swift said.
Meanwhile, electric vehicles (EVs) and
associated battery markets are an important
growth opportunity for the chemical industry,
with chemical producers developing battery
materials, as well as specialty polymers and
adhesives for EVs.
(US$1= C$1.37)
Thumbnail photo of cars Honda assembles at
Alliston, 100km north of Toronto, where the
Japanese auto major is postponing a
multi-billion dollar investment in electric
vehicles and batteries (Photo source:
Honda)
Please visits the ICIS topic
pagesAutomotive: Impact on
chemicals
US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy
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