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Speciality Chemicals24-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Covestro is acquiring Swiss
multilayer adhesive films company Pontacol for
an undisclosed sum as part of a strategic
portfolio expansion, it said on Tuesday.
The Germany-headquartered polymer materials
producer said the deal would enable production
capacity expansion for multilayer adhesive
films in Europe and the development of new
markets.
The transaction, which is expected to close in
the third quarter, includes two specialized
production sites in Switzerland and Germany
with 100 employees, focusing on different film
technologies.
Covestro said the film segment was growing
worldwide, driven by increasing demand in
future markets such as medical technology,
mobility, and the textile industry.
Crude Oil24-Jun-2025
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.
“The ceasefire is now in effect,” said Trump
said in a social media post.
Both Brent and WTI benchmarks were trading
below $70/barrel as of 07:45 GMT.
Crude prices in $/barrel
Product
Latest (as of 07:45 GMT)
Previous
Change
Brent August
69.31
71.48
-2.17
WTI August
66.39
68.51
-2.12
Latest developments have eased concerns about
the possible blockade by Iran of the Strait of
Hormuz, which is vital for global energy
trades.
Trump had earlier announced on social media a
“total and complete” ceasefire that will come
into effect within 24 hours if both Israel and
Iran maintain peace.
At 06:20 GMT, the Israeli government released a
statement declaring that its objectives in the
conflict had been achieved, thanking Trump and
the US for their “participation in eliminating
the Iranian nuclear threat”.
The statement from the Office of Israel Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu noted that Israel
agreed to the ceasefire.
“Israel will respond forcefully to any
violation of the ceasefire,” it added.
In a reversal from an earlier post denying a
ceasefire, Iran foreign minister Abbas Araghchi
in social media post on X that military
operations on Israel had continued until “the
very last minute” at 4am local time (00:30
GMT).
Meanwhile, Islamic Revolution Guards Corps
(IRGC) commander Mohammad Pakpour said that any
renewed US aggression would be met with “even
more crushing and regret-inducing responses”,
according to Iranian state media.
Following the easing of tensions in the Middle
East, the focus should now return to core
fundamentals, such as OPEC’s production ramp-up
plans, global demand trends, and softening
growth outlook – all of which argue for weaker
oil prices, said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior
analyst at Swissquote Bank, in a note on
Tuesday.
US crude could fall below $65/barrel and resume
its year-to-date bearish trajectory if tensions
do not re-escalate, Ozkardeskaya said.
(Adds details throughout)
Visit the ICIS Israel-Iran conflict: impact
on chemicals and energy topic page for
latest updates and analysis
Power24-Jun-2025
IPS talks to ICIS about its new BESS
factory in Bulgaria and other developments
The BESS production plant could speed up
storage deployment in Bulgaria and in central
and eastern Europe, boost grid stability
Bulgaria eyes 10GWh BESS by end of 2026
WARSAW (ICIS)–To address rapidly growing
demand for energy storage, International
Power Supply (IPS) is set to officially open
a new automated manufacturing facility of
industrial and utility scale batteries in
Bulgaria in September, Mariyana Yaneva, CEO
at IPS, told ICIS in an exclusive interview.
The manufacturing will launch with a 1.5GWh
annual capacity, scaling to 3GWh by the end
of 2025, IPS plans indicated.
Yaneva said the move to produce industrial
and utility scale battery energy storage
systems (BESS) is “a natural next step for
the company with 36 years of experience in
R&D and manufacturing of power conversion
systems and micro-grid solutions with
projects ranging from the deserts of Saudi
Arabia to Livingston Island in Antarctica.”
In May, IPS announced the launch of the
EXERON X-BESS 8, its latest innovation in
utility-scale BESS.
BENCHMARK PRODUCT
The system delivers a rated capacity of up to
8.1MWh with an integrated 4MW inverter. This
represents a new benchmark for power density
and space efficiency in large-scale
applications, IPS told ICIS.
“Our objective is to deliver market value
through a vertically integrated BESS designed
to optimize total cost of ownership. The
modular architecture of our system reduces
costs associated with transportation,
installation, and maintenance while the
integrated power conversion system can
support a wide range of applications,
including grid-forming functionalities,
offering asset operators the technical
capability to stack revenues from power and
systems services markets,” Yaneva added.
“As a European manufacturer, we are also well
positioned to capitalize on the noticeable
shift in EU policy to support the development
of cleantech industry in Europe through the
upcoming NZIA requirements for public
procurement as well as resilient and
independent supply chains,” Yaneva told ICIS.
“For the moment, investor interest in energy
storage is very strong in Bulgaria and the
wider region,” she said.
This is also partially underpinned by
available European funding schemes, “but
equally so by the changing energy mix in
those countries. For example, solar PV jumped
from 4% in the annual energy mix of Bulgaria
in 2020 to 14% in 2024,” she noted.
Yaneva also told ICIS that, “As solar capture
prices continue to decline and the spread
between minimum and maximum prices in the
day-ahead market widens, market conditions
are increasingly favorable for arbitrage
trading strategies”.
In this context, she explained, BESS can play
a “critical role” in enhancing energy
management strategies for both renewable
energy producers and industrial electricity
consumers.
Yaneva also said co-location or hybridization
of generation and energy storage assets,
especially solar-plus-storage, will be the
new standard for continued development of the
sector.
As renewables make up an ever-increasing
share of the generation mix, they will also
have to take up more responsibilities with
respect to the balancing of the system and
the trading profiles that allow assets to
capture a sustainable internal rate of return
(IRR).
BULGARIAN BESS TARGETS
During a recent forum, Angelin Tsachev,
executive director of the Bulgarian
electricity transmission operator ESO also
highlighted the large investor interest in
the construction of electricity storage
systems.
Over the past nine months, BESS connection
applications reached a total capacity of over
11GW and a storage capacity of nearly 32GWh.
The preliminary contracts concluded are for a
capacity of over 7.5GW and a storage capacity
of 23GWh.
Two independent energy storage facilities
have already been put into operation:
One has a power of 10MW and a storage
capacity of 27MWh. The other has an installed
power of 125MW and a storage capacity of
almost 500MWh, ESO said.
IPS is a preferred supplier to several
co-located and stand-alone projects that will
also start operations in Bulgaria by the end
of the year. The capacity of the first
production line is fully booked by the end of
the year, Yaneva added.
“Should the European Commission and national
authorities extend the deadline for project
implementation under the NRRP schemes beyond
March 2026, as is already indicated by the
latest voting in European Parliament, this
will allow us to absorb more of the local
demand, but in any case, we are looking for
partners to expand on other European markets
too,” Yaneva told ICIS.

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Petrochemicals24-Jun-2025
MUMBAI (ICIS)–India’s Dhunseri Ventures Ltd
(DVL) plans to invest rupee (Rs) 22.4 billion
($260 million) to expand its packaging film
capacity through brownfield and greenfield
expansions, a company official said on Tuesday.
The expansion would be done through its wholly
owned subsidiary Dhunseri Poly Films Pvt Ltd
(DPFPL).
DPFPL plans to invest Rs10 billion to build a
61,000 tonne/year biaxially oriented
polyethylene terephthalate (BOPET) unit and a
95,000 tonne/year biaxially oriented
polypropylene (BOPP) line at its existing
complex at Panagarh in the eastern West Bengal
state, the official said.
The company expects to begin operations at the
new plants by calendar year 2029, he added.
Currently, DPFPL operates a 51,000 tonne/year
BOPET line at the Panagarh complex.
Separately, the company plans to set up two
BOPP lines with a combined production capacity
of 128,000 tonnes/year at Kathua in the Jammu
Division of the Indian Union territory of Jammu
and Kashmir.
The project is expected to cost Rs12.4 billion
and the company plans to begin operations at
the plant by early 2027, the official said.
The parent firm DVL currently operates two PET
resin plants with a combined capacity of
696,000 tonne/year in West Bengal and northern
Haryana state through its joint venture
subsidiary IVL Dhunseri Petrochem Industries
Ltd (IDPIL).
IDPIL is an equal joint venture between
Thailand’s Indorama Ventures Ltd (IVL) and DVL.
The joint venture firm also operates a 540,000
tonne/year PET unit in Egypt.
In September 2024, IDPIL formed a JV with
Indian bottling company Varun Beverages to
establish several greenfield PET recycling
facilities in India.
The joint venture has begun construction of two
plants – one at Kathua and the second unit at
Khurdha in Odisha state in eastern India. The
plants are expected to become operational in 2025.
($1= Rs86.20)
Ammonia23-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–There is now 96% of the soybean
acreage planted with the corn crop 97% emerged,
according to the latest crop progress report
from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).
Corn emergence climbed slightly over the past
week to stand at 97%, which is above the 96%
from 2024 but trails the five-year average of
98%.
For corn conditions, there is now 2% being
listed as very poor, with 4% still poor and 24%
being rated as fair.
The crop ranked as good has decreased to 56%,
with 14% as excellent.
In the first update on corn silking, there is
4% of the crop at this crucial stage, which is
equal to the 4% from 2024 and is just above the
five-year average of 3%.
Soybeans plantings have reached 96%, which
matches the 96% rate achieved in 2024, but the
current pace is just behind the five-year
average of 97%.
All the states surveyed are above 86% on their
soybean sowings except for Tennessee at 84% and
Kentucky at 82% completed.
Soybean emergence is at 90%, which is ahead of
the 89% level from the 2024 season and equal to
the five-year average of 90%.
In the first update on the crop blooming, the
USDA said 8% of the acreage has reached this
stage, which is just ahead of the 7% from 2024
and the five-year average of 7%.
Soybean conditions were left unchanged with 2%
very poor, 5% as poor, 27% fair, 56% as good
and those as excellent at 10%.
Cotton plantings are at 92%, with sorghum
sowings 84% completed.
Ethylene23-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 20 June.
Colombia’s fiscal issues could hit
plastics amid relentless China competition
pressures
Colombia’s plastics industry is managing to
navigate through a turbulent period for the
country’s macroeconomics and growing at over
3%, but the cabinet’s fiscal issues and
intensifying Chinese imports pose risks,
according to the president of trade group
Acoplasticos.
US PP recycler PureCycle to reach 1
billion lb/year capacity by
2030
PureCycle plans to reach 1 billion lb/year
(454,000 tonnes/year) of capacity in the US
by 2030, Europe and Asia, the US-base
recycler of polypropylene (PP) said on
Tuesday.
Petchems spreads may be lower for
longer post downturn, now expected to stretch
to 2028 – Fitch
The global petrochemicals downturn could
potentially stretch to 2028, but the
years-long crisis due to overcapacities may
leave a lasting mark – lower for longer
margins, according to a chemicals analyst at
credit rating agency Fitch.
Global PVC market braces for glut as
protectionism rises and demand
falters
The global polyvinyl chloride (PVC) market is
poised for a significant supply surplus,
primarily driven by a surge in Chinese
exports and an increasingly protectionist
international trade environment, an industry
analyst said on Thursday.
Mexico’s chemicals imports
increasingly hit by customs rules, adding to
Manzanillo port crisis
woes
Mexico’s Port of Manzanillo is gradually
recovering cargo handling capacity, which
currently stands at around 60% of normal
levels, according to the port’s authority,
after weeks of operational disruptions caused
by customs delays.
Ethylene23-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–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.
Geopolitical and trade conflicts are making
supply chains less resilient and more costly.
Conflict is increasing uncertainty, which
is causing companies and consumers to delay
investments and purchases.
Conflict creates its own feedback loop by
making escalation more likely, which
contributes to more uncertainty and volatility.
VOLATILITY IS HERE TO
STAYIan Bremmer, president of
the Eurasia Group consultancy, talked about
conflicts and geopolitical risk prior to the
Iranian conflict at the annual meeting held
earlier in June by the American Chemistry
Council (ACC).
Bremmer’s comments were timely and prescient,
because he stressed that geopolitical risk has
increased. A little more than a week after he
spoke, Israel launched its attack on Iran. The
US later attacked multiple nuclear sites in
Iran.
“The geopolitical volatility we’re facing right
now is deep, it’s structural, and it’s going to
be with us for probably a decade or more,”
Bremmer said. “This is going to be a very
fraught geopolitical environment, and that will
lead to greater costs for all of your
industries, all of your companies.”
Already, conflicts have reached their highest
level since the end of the Second World War,
according to the Uppsala
Conflict Data Program. The following chart
shows the number of state-based conflicts by
level of intensity.
Recent conflicts include the following:
Yemen Civil War
Myanmar Civil War
Russia and Ukraine
Israel and Hamas in Gaza
Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon
India and Pakistan
Ethiopian conflicts
Conflicts in the eastern provinces of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo
WHY CONFLICTS ARE HERE TO
STAYBremmer gave three reasons
why conflicts are becoming more common and why
risk will remain heightened.
Russia was never integrated into the West
following the collapse of the Soviet Union, he
said.
China’s economic and diplomatic integration
took place while it maintained one-party rule
and a state-driven economy, Bremmer said. In
the past 10 years, China’s economy has become
more state driven.
“The West, and especially the United States, is
deeply unhappy about that,” Bremmer said. “And
that creates major conflict between the two
most important economies in the world.”
In Bremmer’s opinion, the most important reason
behind the increase in geopolitical risk is the
lack of confidence that US voters have in their
traditional elites. That leadership includes
the political class as well as the media,
universities, bankers and corporations.
This loss of confidence among US voters has
caused weakening support for global causes
traditionally supported by the country, such as
promoting collective security, global trade,
the rule of law and democracy, Bremmer said.
These three trends have been building up for
years, and it will take years for them to sort
themselves out, Bremmer said.
CONFLICT RAISES COSTS, SLOWS GROWTH FOR
CHEMSBy their nature, conflicts
make markets less accessible. A nation under
fire cannot readily import or export goods and
services.
Chemical companies lose access to lower cost
energy, feedstock, equipment and raw materials.
Similarly, they lose access to their most
attractive export markets.
Tensions and conflicts sever global supply
chains. Their replacements are more regional
and more resilient but also more costly because
they lack economies of scale and, often, less
expensive labor and raw materials.
Conflicts make trade sanctions and tariffs more
likely.
Conflict creates uncertainty, which discourages
companies and consumers from making investments
and buying goods.
In fact, US chemical companies have said that
the biggest effect of recent tariffs has not
been the actual duties but the uncertainty
about how long they will last and whether more
tariffs will be imposed.
Conflict can influence oil prices, especially
when the source of those tensions is in
crude-producing countries and regions like
Russia and the Middle East. Chemical prices
tend to rise and fall with those for oil.
The conflict over Iran’s nuclear program has
raised questions about whether Iran will close
the Strait of Hormuz.
DISRUPTIONS CAUSED BY WAR BETWEEN IRAN,
ISRAELWith that, chemical
companies can expect more of the disruptions
that have characterized the war between Iran
and Israel.
Israeli attacks on Iran’s gas field in South
Pars caused
that country to shut down millions of
tonnes of methanol capacity.
That
reduced Iranian methanol shipments to
China, which used the chemical as a
feedstock to make olefins. Higher methanol
costs have
raised Chinese prices of acetic acid.
Iran also shut down its ethylene glycol (EG),
ammonia and urea plants for safety reasons.
Israel’s BAZAN Group had shut down all
operations at its refinery and its subsidiaries
at its complex in Haifa Bay after a missile
attack, according to S&P Global Ratings.
The conflict caused Israel to suspend gas
shipments to Egypt,
which led to shutdowns of a chlor-alkali
plant, some polyethylene (PE) lines and urea
production.
After US attacks on Iranian nuclear sites, its
parliament has expressed support for
closing the Strait of Hormuz, according to
media reports.
If Iran shuts down the Strait of Hormuz, that
would not only restrict oil exports from Gulf
nations,
it would also restrict petrochemical
exports from Kuwait and other Gulf nations
as well as Qatari exports of liquefied natural
gas (LNG) and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).
China’s fleet of propane dehydrogenation (PDH)
units relies on imports of LPG for feedstock,
and Qatar is among the world’s largest
exporters.
Insight article by Al
Greenwood
Thumbnail shows an Iranian missile in
Israel. Image by ATEF
SAFADI/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock.
Gas23-Jun-2025
ICIS data shows Qatar, UAE LNG production
in line with normal range
Growing focus on Iran’s Hormuz Strait
closure rhetoric
Over 80% of Qatari LNG goes to Asia but
highly relevant for Europe
LONDON (ICIS)–LNG production from Qatar and
the UAE – the two countries that sit the other
side of the Strait of Hormuz from global buyers
– continues as normal, according to ICIS data.
Disruption to shipping signals is making the
accurate tracking of LNG vessels harder, and
more ballast Qatari vessels are waiting east of
Hormuz than normal before going to Ras Laffan
to load.
ICIS data on Monday 23 June showed that 43
vessels had loaded from Ras Laffan in the last
15 days, unchanged from the same period last
year.
This is down by one from the previous 15-day
period, but this is not an unusual deviation
given the scale of 77.4mtpa production.
A total of four cargoes loaded from the UAE’s
Das Island over the past 15 days, up by one
from last year, down by one from the previous
15 days, according to ICIS data.
ICIS analysts have observed a number of vessels
near Qatar registering false positions via
their AIS signal data.
But ICIS identified the laden 138,000cbm
Disha
as having crossed Hormuz east on Sunday 22
June, as well as the 152,000cbm Al
Areesh and the 174,000cbm Al
Sakhamah.
The 138,000cbm Raahi
appears to have crossed west in ballast on 23
June.
KEY LNG TRADE FLOWS
Global gas and LNG
spot prices have moved up since early June due
to growing security concerns in the Middle
East, and are back to the highest levels since
February.
While the TTF now reacts immediately to major
geo-political news given the depth of market
participants, liquidity, and Europe’s
dependency on LNG imports, East Asian spot LNG
pricing remains less liquid, and highly
influenced by the European market.
That said, the ICIS East Asia Index remains at
a volatile premium to the TTF, despite limited
new LNG demand signals from Asian buyers.
Since the start of 2024, 82% of Qatari LNG has
gone to Asian markets, according to ICIS data,
with Europe now accounting for a much smaller
share.
Rising US LNG production has stepped in to
dominate Europe’s LNG supply.
The UK, for example, now imports much more from
the US than it does from Qatar.
Major LNG buyers continue to analyse potential
risks to current supply from the Middle East
situation, and are well aware of the impact
even a small reduction in Qatari deliveries
would have.
While this would hit Asian buyers most
directly, it would also impact European markets
if higher Asian spot prices pulled US LNG away
from Europe.
BULLISH PRICES
An Asian price premium of up to $0.50/MMBtu to
the TTF – typical of the last month – would
likely mean sufficient US LNG flows to both
Europe and Asia to cover demand and reflects a
reasonably well-balanced market.
In the event of a cut in supply to Asia, the
EAX would rise, taking the TTF with it given
Europe’s dependency on LNG.
The Asian premium to TTF would likely need to
rise to at least $2/MMBtu to pull much larger
volumes of US LNG away from Europe.
Further TTF price rises would filter through
across European energy markets.
In Asia, most LNG is still sold on an oil price
link which is currently well below spot prices
– although oil prices would naturally also be
impacted by Hormuz disruption.
It is unlikely, however, that outright gas and
LNG prices would substantially deviate between
the two regions as both would compete for
cargoes.
Higher spot LNG prices would also dent demand
from many Asian buyers.
Any extended closure of Hormuz appears highly
unlikely given likely pressure that would come
from major economic and military powers against
Iran.
But even short-term disruption could lift LNG
and gas prices and lead to significant
scrambling from sellers and buyers needing to
use all available optimization and risk
management tools at their disposal.
Alex Froley contributed to this story
Petrochemicals23-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Click
here to see the latest blog post on
Chemicals & The Economy by Paul Hodges,
which suggests it would be prudent to plan for
further escalation of the trade and military
wars in H2.
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.
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