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Gas10-Jun-2025
Serbia eyes new gas interconnectors with
Romania and North Macedonia by 2030
This could ensure domestic supply, serve as
a transit route to Europe
Srbijagas and Russia’s Gazprom in talks for
a new long-term gas deal
WARSAW (ICIS)– Serbia plans to build gas
interconnectors with Romania and North
Macedonia, diversifying its own gas needs and
supporting supply security in the Balkan region
over the coming years, as indicated by the
country’s energy strategy released on 10 June.
Balkan gas traders told ICIS that Serbia is
expected to receive gas supplies from two
routes: Romania’s Neptune Deep field and
Azerbaijan.
“Having three different gas supply options will
guarantee Serbia’s energy security and
diversification,” a local trader said.
The government energy strategy released on 10
June said the country aims to build a 1.6
billion cubic meters (bcm)/year pipeline
interconnection with Romania and 1.2bcm/year
with North Macedonia.
Both projects should be operational by 2030 as
the government seeks private funding to aid
their development.
Serbia seeks to establish new supply routes:
one from Greece’s new Alexandroupolis LNG
terminal, where Serbian state supplier
Srbijagas has booked 300 million cubic meters
of capacity per year and a second from
Romania’s Neptune Deep gas field.
The Romanian field is expected to have 100bcm
in reserves with the first gas output expected
in 2027.
“The North Macedonia route is expected to boost
Azeri flows to Serbia and the region,” a second
trader added.
Back in November 2023, Srbijagas and
Azerbaijan’s SOCAR signed a one-year gas supply
contract of up to 400mcm supplied in
2024 with an option for 1bcm/year volumes
in the following years.
This winter Azeri gas flowed via the
1.8bcm/year Serbia-Bulgaria interconnector.
GAZPROM TALKS
Serbian gas supply will remain uninterrupted in
the summer months thanks to the signing of a
short-term gas deal
with Russian producer Gazprom, the chief
executive of Serbia’s incumbent Srbijagas,
Dusan Bajatovic, said in a briefing on 27 May.
Srbijagas’s current three-year deal for
2.2bcm/year of supply expired on 31 May
and the two firms signed an agreement covering
the period 1 June- 31 September 2025 for 6
million cubic meters/day.
Srbijagas and Gazprom are now negotiating a new
long-term supply contract.
Methanol10-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–As China steps up efforts to
meet its dual carbon targets, hydrogen is
becoming a practical and strategic tool to cut
emissions from the country’s highly
carbon-intensive cement industry.
Cement industry under carbon pressure
From hydrogen as substitute to carbon
utilization for new value
Five-year window open for low-carbon pilots
Cement accounts for around 13-14% of China’s
total carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, ranking
it the third-largest industrial source after
power and steel.
Facing mounting pressure from both
international carbon regulations and domestic
policy, China can tap hydrogen as a promising
route toward meaningful emissions reductions.
China’s cement industry is estimated to have
emitted about 1.20 billion tonnes of CO2 in
2023, down for a third straight year.
Emissions stood at 1.23 billion tonnes of CO2
in 2020, when China’s cement clinker output
peaked at 1.58 billion tonnes, and cement
output hit 2.38 billion tonnes, according to
China Building Materials Federation.
Around 60% of this comes from the chemical
reaction when limestone is heated to make
clinker, a process that is difficult to change
in the short term due to raw material
constraints. Another 35% comes from fossil
fuels combustion to generate heat for clinker
production, which is a key substitution target.
As of March 2025, China’s national ETS
(Emissions Trading Scheme) expanded to include
cement, alongside steel and aluminum, hence,
the cement sector is also now fully exposed to
carbon pricing.
However, despite policy urgency, due to
technical and equipment retrofitting
complexities, the sector has moved slowly. The
next five years will represent a pivotal window
to scale pilot projects and validate
decarbonization pathways.
TWO ROUTES: CLEANER COMBUSTION &
CARBON USE
Hydrogen can help reduce emissions from cement
mainly in two ways: fossil fuel substitution
and carbon utilization.
Fuel substitution with hydrogen is the
immediate decarbonization
leverage. Hydrogen can directly replace
coal or gas in kilns. Its high calorific value
and zero-carbon combustion profile make it an
ideal fuel.
However, because of its weak flame radiation
and explosion risk, hydrogen is usually mixed
with other fuels in current tests. European
players lead the change:
Cemex, a leading global building materials
manufacturer, completed hydrogen retrofits at
all its European cement plants by 2020,
targeting a 5% CO2 reduction by 2030.
Heidelberg Materials, another cement giant
actively exploring hydrogen applications,
achieved 100% net-zero fuel operation at its UK
Ribblesdale plant in 2021, using a mix of 39%
hydrogen, 12% meat and bone meal, and 49%
glycerin.
Another option is to combine CO2 capture from
kiln exhausts with renewable hydrogen to
synthesize e-methanol or e-methane.
E-methanol and e-methane are synthetic fuels
made by combining captured CO2 with renewable
hydrogen using renewable electricity.
LafargeHolcim, as one of the largest cement
producers in the world, has multiple hydrogen
decarbonisation projects across Europe. It is
leading with its HyScale100 project in Germany,
which aims to install electrolyzers at its
Heide refinery, and combine electrolyzed
hydrogen with CO2 from its Lägerdorf plant to
produce e-methanol starting 2026.
This model not only reduces emissions but also
builds links across industries to create a
circular carbon economy.
CHINA: FROM POLICY PUSH TO PILOT
PROJECTS
Policy support is gaining momentum in China.
The 2024 Special Action Plan for Cement Energy
Saving and Carbon Reduction aims to raise
alternative fuel use to 10% by 2025, explicitly
naming hydrogen. The Ministry of Industry and
Information Technology (MIIT) sets out a 2030
goal to commercialize low-carbon kilns using
hydrogen.
Amid the decarbonization policy signals,
China’s major cement producers are also
stepping up:
The Beijing Building Materials Academy of
Scientific Research (BBMA) under Beijing
Building Materials Group (BBMG) completed
China’s first industrial trial in December 2024
using >70% hydrogen in calcination.
Anhui Conch Cement Company used 5% hydrogen in
pre-calciners, cutting 0.01 tonnes of CO2 per
tonne of clinker, albeit with an added cost of
yuan (CNY) 32.7/tonne.
Tangshan Jidong Cement is building a full
hydrogen supply chain in partnership with China
National Chemical Engineering.
Hydrogen is also being produced on-site using
waste heat from clinker kilns to power
electrolysis – a promising approach to localize
supply and enhance energy efficiency.
CHALLENGES STILL AHEAD
Despite policy and pilot momentum,
commercialization hydrogen use in China’s
cement sector still faces barriers.
Renewable hydrogen costs are too high for wide
use. Studies suggest it would need to fall
below $0.37/kg to be cost-effective in cement
under carbon trading.
Hydrogen is hard to store and transport, and
its flame instability requires kiln retrofits
and safety systems.
China also lacks unified national technical
standards for using hydrogen in cement, slowing
adoption.
Hydrogen may not yet be ready for mass rollout,
but it is clearly part of the future of cement
in China. As production costs fall, carbon
markets grow, and hydrogen technologies mature,
hydrogen could become a real driver of change
in one of China’s hardest-to-decarbonize
sectors.
Insight article by Patricia
Tao
Ethylene10-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s exports to the US are
expected to rebound in June as exporters ramp
up frontloading efforts before the 90-day trade
truce between the two global economic
superpowers expires in August.
China May exports to US shrink 34.5% year
on year
China’s imports from the US fall by 18.6%
US-bound freight rates from China remain
elevated
Despite the tariff rollback in mid-May,
US-bound exports fell by 34.5% year on year in
May to $28.8 billion, a sharper decline than
the 20.9% fall recorded in April, official data
showed on 9 June.
“The boost from the US tariff rollback should
be more significant in June, as it might take a
couple of weeks to restore the logistics
network that was disrupted by what had nearly
become a US-China trade embargo,” Japan’s
Nomura Global Markets Research said in note.
“This could be because, as bilateral trade
collapsed in April amid exceptionally high
tariffs imposed by the two countries, many
container ships for US-China shipping lanes
were re-routed to other lanes.”
A 90-day trade truce between China and the US
was agreed on 12 May but ongoing negotiations
face threats from slow rare-earth shipment
approvals.
US tariffs on Chinese goods were at 30% from 14
May to 12 August, while China levies 10% duties
on US imports.
The sharp recovery in container bookings and
freight rates also indicate an incoming rebound
in US-bound exports in June, according to
Nomura.
“The temporary trade truce will provide room
for exports to strengthen in June-August before
the momentum reverses with payback from the
strong frontloading to-date,” said Ho Woei
Chen, an economist at Singapore-based UOB
Global Economics & Markets Research.
China’s imports from the US fell by 18.6% year
on year to $10.8 billion in May, a steeper
decline than the 13.9% fall recorded in April,
“perhaps due to similar issues with near-term
shipping capacity”, Nomura noted.
As a result, the US share in China’s total
exports fell further to 9.1% in May from 14.7%
for the whole of 2024.
Following substantial export contraction and a
less severe import decline, China’s trade
surplus with the US decreased further to $18.0
billion in May from $20.5 billion in April.
OVERALL EXPORT GROWTH
SLOWS
China’s overall exports fell by 4.8% year
on year to $316.1 billion in May, slowing from
the 8.1% growth in April.
Imports fell by a steeper rate of 3.4% year on
year to $212.9 billion in May, from the 0.2%
contraction in April.
China’s overall trade surplus increased 25%
year on year to $103.2 billion in May.
Export growth to its largest market, ASEAN,
which is also widely viewed as a major
rerouting pathway for Chinas’ US-bound
shipments, slowed to 14.8% year on year in May
from 21.1% in April.
This was mainly a result of base effects, as
growth of exports to ASEAN surged to 24.8% year
on year in May last year from 13.0% a month
earlier, Nomura noted.
Among ASEAN countries, Vietnam and the
Philippines took in higher volumes of Chinese
exports in May.
China’s exports to the EU, Canada and Australia
improved in May, as exporters shifted to
developed markets other than the US.
“The acceleration of exports to other economies
has helped China’s exports remain relatively
buoyant in the face of the trade war,” Lynn
Song, chief economist for Greater China at
Dutch banking and financial information
services firm ING said in a note.
EXPORTS IN MAJOR CATEGORIES MIXED IN
MAY
China’s ships and semiconductors registered
solid double-digit export growth, while
shipments of motor vehicles and auto parts also
picked up.
Demand for chips, in particular, continued to
benefit from the pause in US tariffs on
technology products such as smartphones,
computers, and semiconductors.
However, exports of rare earth materials shrunk
sharply, and products such as handbags,
footwear, toys, and furniture declined due to a
drop in US demand.
US-CHINA TRADE TALKS
RESUME
Following a rapid re-escalation in late May,
trade tensions between the US and China eased
on 5 June following a phone call between US
President Donald Trump and China President Xi
Jinping. It set the stage for a new round of
dialogue between their top trade officials in
London this week.
Ahead of the trade talks, China reportedly
approved temporary export licenses to rare
earth suppliers of the top three US automakers,
as Trump claimed Xi agreed to restart the flow
of rare earth minerals.
“As US and China resumed trade negotiations
this week, China’s Commerce Ministry confirmed
that it has granted approval to some
applications for the export of rare earths
which will likely lead to a recovery in rare
earth exports in June,” UOB’s Ho said.
“Following the Phase 1 trade deal in 2020, we
think an eventual trade deal this time would
likely commit China to reduce its trade surplus
with the US by increasing its US imports,” she
said.
While the baseline tariff rate for China is
likely to be raised, the two countries may find
common ground on the Trump administration’s
concerns regarding China’s involvement in the
fentanyl trade, according to Ho.
“This could potentially lead to a removal of
the 20% fentanyl-related tariff, in the
optimistic scenario. Thus, it is conceivable
that the “final” US tariff rate on imports from
China may settle between 30% to 60%.”
CONTAINER FREIGHT RATES ON THE
RISE
US-bound freight rates have remained elevated,
while growth in weekly container throughput
dropped to 1.3% year on year on 8 June from
10.2% a week earlier, which “dims the outlook
of China’s overall exports”, Nomura said.
The China Containerized Freight Index (CCFI),
which tracks average shipping prices from
China’s 10 major ports, rose 3.3% week on week
as of 6 June, it said.
This included a 1.6% increase to Europe and a
4.1% rise to the US East Coast.
In contrast, the Ningbo Container Freight Index
(NCFI), tracking outbound container shipping
costs, eased 0.4% week on week on 6 June,
according to Nomura.
Specifically, it saw a 9.1% decline to the US
West Coast and remained unchanged for the US
East Coast during the same period.
Internationally, the Freightos Baltic Index
(FBX), reflecting spot rates for 40-foot
containers across 12 global trade lanes, surged
by 52.3% week on week on 6June, “indicating a
significant jump in global shipping costs”,
Nomura said.
Focus article by Nurluqman
Suratman
Please also visit US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy
Thumbnail image: Containers pile up at
Longtan Container Terminal of Nanjing Port in
Nanjing City, Jiangsu Province, China, on 9
June 2025.
(Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)

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Ethylene09-Jun-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Mexico is well-positioned to
benefit from the global trade reorganization
started by the US as it takes a stronger stance
against China and replicate the resounding
success of the 1990s, when the first North
America free trade agreement (FTA) NAFTA was
signed, the president of the country’s
chemicals trade group ANIQ said.
José Carlos Pons, who is also the CFO at
Mexican chemicals producer Alpek, said Mexico,
the wider North America and the world at large
still face some persistent Chinese overcapacity
of industrial goods which are flooding markets,
but said North America together would face that
threat in a better position.
Pons has just
started his tenure as ANIQ president at a
time when the trade group is navigating shifts
in trade policies as well as domestic issues
such as the potential for – or lack of –
nearshoring as well as policy issues in which
companies fully disagree with the left-leaning
government of Claudia Sheinbaum.
Pons did not want to enter into much detail
about the latter, however, because as he
explained in the first
part of this interview, ANIQ’s lobbying
strategy is to now go “hand in hand” with the
government.
According to him, Sheinbaum is honestly trying
to fix the beleaguered, state-owned energy
major Pemex, which would at the same time
greatly help chemicals raw material supply
reliability.
NAFTA, USMCA, SOMETHING
ELSE?
Soon after taking office in January, US
President Donald Trump imposed hefty import
tariffs on Mexico and Canada because, he said,
the two countries should do more on migration
and fentanyl trade – a powerful drug which has
caused havoc across the US.
However, when the tariffs were about to kick
off, the US announced it was pausing them for
one month. It was a timely decision for Mexico:
the country is almost completely dependent on
the fate of the US economy, as it exports
around 80% of its output north of the border.
That dependance is what makes Corporate Mexico
wary of even contemplating a break-up of the
now called USMCA FTA, the successor to NAFTA
which Trump negotiated during his first term.
Pons is optimistic in all fronts – home front
and external front – as a relatively young
executive who arrives to the helm of ANIQ in
some of the most challenging times for Mexico
in the past three decades.
“I do feel on the side of the optimists. All
this issue of tariffs and economic
reorganization of imports and exports in the
world – if the US plays a strong role against
Asia, as I believe it will end up playing, then
what can happen is that Mexico is super
well-positioned for greater investments,” said
Pons.
“Mexico has natural advantages in serving the
US market. Today in many of the industries we
are a very relevant supplier to the US. We are
connected by pipeline, so to speak, to the US.
When there is a competitive supply that Mexico
has, Mexico remains the most convenient place
to source for the US – it is next door.”
It has been widely reported that USMCA
renegotiations, for which the deadline is 2026,
are in full swing and both officials from
Mexico and Canada have recently said they are
hopeful USMCA will be renegotiated and revived,
ultimately making North America stronger versus
other big economies.
“I think that commercial logic and economic
logic will prevail. Trump, if he understands
anything very well, it is economic logic and
from that point of view I believe that the
logic of Canada-US-Mexico integration will
stand out. The last renewal of the free trade
agreement was positive in general, with no
major changes,” said Pons.
“In fact, I think we put some order on some of
the issues, some of them affecting chemicals,
so from that point of view it has been
favorable for us. We are understandably focused
on the short-term news, but if we take a
slightly longer-term view, I think it [current
renegotiations] can end up benefitting the
region.”
Following on with the soft lobbying ANIQ is
deploying, he praised the cabinet for keeping a
cold head before adversity and having gone
through momentous crisis points relatively
unscathed. Moreover, Sheinbaum’s popularity
ratings are almost unheard of in democracies:
around 80% of Mexicans have a positive view of
her.
“I perceive a Mexican government that is calm,
serene, looking more at the long term than the
short term, not reacting hastily to attacks, as
if taking certain pauses. If you remember,
after some tariffs were imposed on Mexico in
February, Sheinbaum said the Mexican government
would ‘answer in a week’ – they purposefully
wanted to give space for conversations to
happen,” said Pons.
“I think it has been handled well, it has been
handled with composure and I think that is just
what is needed.”
When pressed about domestic policy issues
including a judicial reform which has sparked
fears among most experts in Mexico and abroad,
because it could weaken the rule of law rather
than strengthen it, Pons was cautious but
conceded companies are concerned: without legal
certainty, investments come harder.
“One of the important work areas is legal
certainty and we are worried as an industry
about the change that could occur to legal
certainty with this change,” he said.
“I think we have to understand exactly the
implications of this judicial reform, of the
new judges we are going to have.”
CHINA FORMIDABLE RISEOn
Chinese competition, which has hit chemicals
hard as there is oversupply for the main
petrochemicals and polymers, Pons did say the
scale of overcapacity affecting global markets
is huge, unheard of, and conceded there are
still many question marks surrounding how this
will end – and when.
“We have seen that in practically all sectors
there is excess capacity. China has been very
aggressive. For instance, take polyester
textile fibers as an example – if today the
whole world closed its production capacity and
China maintained its capacity, there would
still be 30% excess capacity,” said Pons.
He mentioned polyethylene terephthalate (PET),
which happens to be one of the main products
which Alpek manufactures and he oversees as
CFO.
“It is no surprise that most countries already
have trade protections against China. For
example, in one of the businesses I participate
in at the company, PET has a 105% antidumping
duty [ADD] in the US against China. Mexico just
decreed an antidumping duty against PET as
well. So, it is very clear that all governments
understood that there is an intention that is
not commercial, not fair trade, which is what
we seek as an industry.”
Pons did not think the West at large – or, more
specifically, market, democratic economies –
had been caught off-guard by the rapid ascent
of China in the industrial goods global league.
“In fact, what much of the industry I represent
has been doing is improving its
competitiveness. There are many investments
going on. Mexico’s companies are investing $1.5
billion in maintenance and competitiveness.
“All those projects and millions of dollars are
focused on improving and putting us on par in
competitiveness against the Chinese,” said
Pons.
The first part of this interview was
published on 6 June on ICIS news, under the
headline “Mexico’s Pemex turnaround key to
unlock $50 billion chemicals investments –
ANIQ”. Click here to read
it.
Front page picture: Facilities operated by
Mexico’s polyethylene (PE) producer Braskem
Idesa
Source: ICIS
Interview article by Jonathan
Lopez
Ethylene09-Jun-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–A Brazilian judge has ordered
customs workers to end their nearly seven-month
strike after the government argued the
industrial action was causing financial harm as
goods pile up at ports and customs facilities
across the country.
The prolonged strike has significantly
disrupted Brazil’s customs operations,
affecting imports and exports at major ports
including Sao Paulo state’s Santos, Latin
America’s largest, with companies working with
perishable goods and time-sensitive materials
experiencing the largest impact.
Superior Court of Justice judge Benedito
Goncalves also imposed a daily Brazilian reais
(R) 500,000 ($89,800) fine on Sindifisco, in
case of non-compliance. Moreover, the judge
ordered an end to what can be perceived as
standard operations, but in which auditors
carry out their duties slowly, as part of their
industrial action.
“Although the Constitution guarantees the right
to strike for public servants, it also protects
the public interest by ensuring the continuity
of essential services,” the ruling said, as
cited by state-owned news agency Agencia
Brasil.
If confirmed, the order would put an end to a
strike which started in November 2024 and which
workers had just doubled down on in early
June, expanding the areas where they would
not be carrying out audits.
The chemicals and fertilizers industries, as
well as many other industrial sectors, were
growing concerned about the industrial
action and its long-term impact, not least
because the Federal Revenue is currently
implementing a new simplified import system,
the last phase of which is to occur in the
second half of 2025.
THE LONGEST
STRIKEEmployees at customs
points started their protest in earnest in
mid-2024, first with partial stoppages or other
type of pressure action. However, talks with
the government on what they deem poor salary
increases never made any meaningful progress.
Then, in November 2024, the strike which has
been legally ended now started. Employees say
they have had just one pay rise since 2016 –
that Lula granted them in 2023 soon after
taking office, a 9% increase, which would be
far from enough to regain the loss of
purchasing power. They also demand full payment
of the efficiency bonus.
Since talks with the government were going
nowhere by May, employees doubled down the
pressure in early June, calling a five-day
“zero clearance period” in which practically
any non-automative checks would not be carried
out.
The government quickly filed a case on 3 June
deeming the latest move illegal, as it would be
harming the state’s constitutionally mandated
provision of essential services.
Additionally, the prolonged strike was casting
a financial shadow over the state’s ability to
collect taxes.
As the cabinet tries to reconcile cutting the
fiscal deficit and expanding the welfare state,
Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said in
parliament in May the strike was high up on the
list as one of the causes for its ministry to
have to re-work the national accounts as tax
proceeds are now to be lower than initially
expected.
“This volume of contingency [lower revenues] is
because some circumstances occurred after the
Budget was submitted. These are facts that need
to be evaluated: The first fact is that there
was no compensation for the payroll tax
relief,” said Haddad, as quoted by state-owned
Agencia Brasil.
“The second problem is the partial shutdown of
the Federal Revenue service, which affects the
performance of the [tax] collection.”
THE END – OR NOTHowever,
Sindifisco published a statement on Saturday
saying that “to date” it had not been formally
notified of the court’s decision.
Sindifisco had not responded to a request for
comment at the time of writing.
“Since 3 June, when the Union [state] filed a
request to declare the tax auditors’ strike,
the union’s legal department has been working
non-stop to take appropriate actions, such as
those that have already been carried out, but
also in defining strategies and possibilities
for action in the legal field,” said
Sindifisco.
“The [union’s] national directorate states that
the strike of tax auditors is legitimate and
follows all the provisions of the relevant
legislation.”
($1 = R5.56)
Front page picture source: Brazil’s Federal
Revenue press services
Additional reporting by Bruno
Menini
Ethylene09-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 6 June.
Clarity on US tariffs could cause big
bounce in chemicals demand – Dow
CEO
A clearer picture on the ultimate level of US
tariffs could lead to a surge in pent-up
demand for chemicals and plastics, said the
CEO of Dow.
Brazil customs workers up strike
pressure with new ‘zero clearance’ period at
Santos port
Brazil’s customs auditors have announced a
new five-day “zero clearance period” at the
Port of Santos on 2-6 June in which no
physical inspections will be carried out,
according to a letter to customers by
logistics company Unimar seen by ICIS.
Tariff-driven uncertainty puts lid on
potential recovery in US PP –
Braskem
Uncertainty surrounding tariffs is tempering
what could be a recovery in US demand for
polypropylene (PP), executives at Braskem
said on Wednesday.
China ethane crackers face feedstock
challenge as US restricts
supply
Operations at China’s ethane crackers that
rely solely on US supply will likely be
disrupted, at least in the short term, as
the US restricts exports of the
feedstock gas.
INSIGHT: New regulatory threats
emerging for US chems
A new regulatory threat for the US chemical
industry is emerging from the alignment of
two wings of the nation’s main political
parties, which could use what critics
describe as pseudoscience to adopt
restrictive and unneeded policies.
Asia-Europe shipping prices jump on
US-China trading window
Container prices for Asia cargoes to Europe
jumped sharply week on week amid a general
surge in freight costs as players look to
lock down shipments from China to the US
during the pause in reciprocal tariffs
between the countries.
Mexico’s Pemex turnaround key to
unlock $50 billion chemicals investments –
ANIQ
Mexico’s chemicals sector is ready to
potentially invest $50 billion in the next
decade if key challenges are addressed,
including performance at state-owned energy
major Pemex, according to the president of
trade group ANIQ.
Petrochemicals09-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Click
here to see the latest blog post on
Chemicals & The Economy by Paul Hodges,
which looks at how robotaxis are starting to
move into the mainstream.
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. Paul Hodges is the chairman of
consultants New
Normal Consulting.
Speciality Chemicals09-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended 6
June.
Europe HDPE spot
dragged sub-€1,000/tonne by US offers as US
Q1 imports ride highSpot
prices for high-density polyethylene (HDPE)
in Europe have fallen below €1,000/tonne as
local buyers receive highly discounted US
offers against a backdrop of high imports
from the US in the first quarter of 2025 and
gaping spreads between the regions.
Higher tariffs on
Russia embolden European producers to lift
nitrate pricesEmboldened
by the European Parliament’s decision to go
ahead with higher import duties on Russian
fertilizers, nitrate producers in Europe have
raised prices despite strong objections from
the farming community.
Europe pharmaceutical
IPA slightly softer, stable demand despite
peak seasonEuropean spot
pricing for premium pharmaceutical grade
isopropanol (IPA) has softened slightly,
while prices for technical and cosmetic
grades are stable amid steady conditions.
European paraxylene
contract price for April, May settles
following contentious
negotiationsEurope
paraxylene (PX) contracts for April and May
have been finalized in a double settlement.
LyondellBasell enters
exclusive talks for Europe asset
divestmentsLyondellBasell
has entered into exclusive talks with an
industrial investor for the sale of four
European production sites, slightly over a
year after launching a review of its asset
base in the region.
Asia-Europe shipping
prices jump on US-China trading
windowContainer prices for
Asia cargoes to Europe jumped sharply week on
week amid a general surge in freight costs as
players look to lock down shipments from
China to the US during the pause in
reciprocal tariffs between the countries.
Limited demand for
Europe PET mitigates impact of higher freight
ratesDemand for European
polyethylene terephthalate (PET) has been
blighted by poor weather conditions, economic
apathy and significant import arrivals.
LyondellBasell Europe
divestment assets had lost money for years –
CEOThe assets
LyondellBasell has entered exclusive talks to
sell to private equity investor AEQUITA had
been cash negative on average to the company
over the last five years, with CEO Peter
Vanacker welcoming a “clean exit” from the
businesses.
Polyethylene09-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Click here to
see the latest blog post on Asian Chemical
Connections by John Richardson.
THE notion of a “replacement society” – where
chemicals demand declines due to ageing
populations and strained pensions – is a
concept that I began to challenge last month.
Today’s post, using recent data and research,
adds to last month’s proposition that
demographics will reshape demand rather than
cause it to collapse –
Spending per person typically peaks in middle
age. But it shifts, it doesn’t disappear.
Data from the US and UK show older households
spend less on clothing or dining out — but far
more on healthcare and home-based services.
OECD, Eurostat and the IMF’s Silver Economy
analysis all shows healthcare demand surging
with age.
And while pension systems are under fiscal
pressure, that doesn’t mean spending collapses.
Goldman Sachs finds life expectancy is up 5%
since 2000 — and working lives are 12% longer.
UBS and Cerulli forecast an $80+ trillion
wealth transfer from Boomers to Millennials and
Gen Z. That’s a powerful source of future
consumption.
The claim that we’ve bought most of the things
we need underestimates human creativity.
People didn’t “need” EVs, wearables or
AI-enhanced homes a decade ago. Now they’re
mainstream.
UBS sees “longevity” as a transformational
innovation opportunity — spanning healthcare,
tech, finance and consumer goods.
Not all the world is ageing. Sub-Saharan Africa
and India are driving global population growth.
Their demand for infrastructure, appliances,
transport and services could more than offset
shrinking demand elsewhere.
But don’t forget China. Its population could
shrink to as little as 373m by the end of the
century.
Can demand growth in India, Africa etc., where
populations are growing, compensate for China’s
demographic challenges?
Can China improve healthcare and pension
systems to help compensate for the economic
drag of a shrinking population?
Here’s my take: We’re not necessarily heading
for a demand collapse. We could instead see a
world shaped by longer lives, new technologies,
government policy and the economic rise of
younger regions.
Climate change may be a bigger negative for
chemicals consumption than demographics.
Adaptation to climate change won’t be fixed by
market forces alone. This will be the subject
of future posts.
What do you think? Are we overplaying
demographic decline? How do we, as a chemicals
industry, adapt to the climate change
challenge?
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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