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China ethylene crackers to further squeeze PDH margins

  • Spanish Market: LPG, Petrochemicals
  • 05/09/23

The propylene yields from ethylene crackers will add to an already well-stocked Chinese market, putting pressure on the country's PDH producers

The start-up of new ethylene steam crackers in China over the next year is expected to add further pressure on propane dehydrogenation (PDH) plant operators, which are already faced with growing domestic propylene supplies as yet more PDH units open in the country.

Beijing's target of reaching 50mn t/yr of ethylene production in 2024 could yield around 5mn t/yr of propylene as a by-product, squeezing market share for the country's expanding fleet of PDH plants — eight new PDH units are due on line this year and seven in 2024.

China's industry and IT ministry on 25 August announced plans to ensure growth in 2023-24 in four industries — petrochemicals, construction materials, non-ferrous metal and steel. This includes the 50mn t/yr goal and ensures five major petrochemical projects will launch before the end of next year.

PDH operators are already facing increasing pressure from building domestic supplies as more plants open and owing to weak downstream demand. The added yields that will emerge from crackers will further raise the likelihood of the market becoming oversupplied in the coming years unless consumption can keep pace.

State-controlled refiners and petrochemical producers might maintain high operating rates to meet Beijing's target, an east Chinese refiner says. Ethylene output will rise by 9pc on the year to about 40mn t this year, Argus estimates. Ethylene capacity will rise by 11pc to 50mn t/yr, from refineries, crackers, coal-to-olefins and methanol-to-olefins facilities. Two notable cracker projects due to start next year include Sinopec and London-based Ineos' 1.2mn t/yr cracker in Tianjin and Chinese firm Yulong Refining's 1.5mn t/yr No 1 cracker in Yantai.

Most crackers produce propylene as a by-product, but the quantity depends on the feedstock. Naphtha yields around 43pc propylene relative to ethylene, propane around 33pc, butane 49pc and ethane only 2.5pc. This, and ethane's higher ratio of ethylene production overall, could make it an increasingly favourable feedstock, although investment in ethane-fed crackers depends on the capability of exporting it from the US on very large ethane carriers (VLEC) — slowing any possible capacity additions.

Chinese PDH operating rates dropped to 76pc by 30 August from 87pc on 2 August. During the same period, ethylene cracker operating rates increased to around 88pc from 82pc, Argus data show. LPG imports decreased by 8.3pc on the month to 2.88mn t in August, according to oil analytics firm Vortexa, which was largely owing to higher propane prices and eroded PDH margins.

This year's eight upcoming PDH projects — with a combined propylene production capacity of 5.7mn t/yr — could be postponed if margins weaken, with no signs of an imminent rebound and peak demand season for propane emerging. Five PDH units with 3mn t/yr of propylene output combined started up in January-August. An east Chinese PDH operator says a 900,000 t/yr second-phase project scheduled to launch in November may be delayed to early 2024 if margins worsens this winter.

Cracking on

Refinery integrated crackers are more competitive than PDH plants given their wider product offering and feedstock choice, and they rarely cut rates because of low propylene prices. Their complex connections to the refinery and downstream units also makes them less flexible in terms of utilisation. PDH plants are dependent on favourable propane feedstock and propylene prices.

Chinese refineries are expected to lower gasoline yields and increase petrochemical production in the medium term by expanding integrated cracking capacity, as motor fuel demand declines. A wave of projects that started development this year is expected to lead to a spike in ethylene production capacity in 2026-27.

Chinese PDH projects 2023
CompanyLocationCapacity '000 t/yrStart-up
Guangxi Huayi New MaterialsQinzhou, Guangxi750Feb*
Yanchang Zhongran TaixingTaixing, Jiangsu600May*
Grand Resource 2Dongguan, Guangdong600June*
Sichem RuihengLianyungang, Jiangsu6003Q
Huahong Petrochemical 2Jiaxing, Zhejiang4503Q
Oriental Maoming 1Maoming, Guangdong6003Q
Shandong Befar ChemicalBinzhou, Shandong6003Q
Formosa NingboNingbo, Zhejiang6003Q
Guoheng ChemicalsQuanzhou, Fujian6602H
Ningbo Jinfa 2Ningbo, Zhejiang6002H
Fujian Soft Packaging MeideFuqing, Fujian9002H
Qingdao Jinneng 2Qingdao, Shandong9002H
Total 7,860
* Operational

China PDH and cracker run rates

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31/12/24

Viewpoint: Canadian propane exports poised to rise

Viewpoint: Canadian propane exports poised to rise

Calgary, 31 December (Argus) — Canadian propane exports to Asia are expected to continue growing in 2025, driven by increased export capacity and natural gas liquids (NGL) production, as producers ramp up drilling to meet rising demand ahead of the LNG Canada export facility start up. Propane and butane exports from Canada to Asia average about 153,000 b/d in the third quarter of 2024. AltaGas exported 128,272 b/d of propane and butane to Asia during the quarter, with about 50,000 b/d leaving its Ferndale, Washington, terminal and 70,000 b/d from the Ridley Island Propane Export Terminal (RIPET) in British Columbia (BC). Additional exports came from Pembina's 25,000 b/d propane export terminal at Watson Island near Prince Rupert, BC. Midstream operators are investing in an additional 70,000 b/d of propane and butane export capacity in the next few years. AltaGas is advancing the construction of its Ridley Island Energy Export Facility (REEF) adjacent to RIPET, which will have an export capacity of 55,000 b/d in its first stage, potentially operational by 2028. Pembina is also considering a 15,000 b/d expansion of its propane export terminal, but a final investment decision (FID) has not yet been made. Another potential increase in export capacity could come if Trigon Terminals repurposes its 18mn t/yr coal export terminal on Ridley Island for NGL exports. There has been no FID on this project, and the company is in litigation with the Prince Rupert Port Authority (PRPA) over export rights. If approved, the project could be operational by 2028, according to the company. The growth in export capacity is driven by rising natural gas production, stemming from expectations of increased LNG exports from Canada. The 14mn t/yr LNG Canada export terminal began commissioning in late August and is expected to start shipping LNG cargoes by mid-2025. Located in Kitimat, BC, it is only 120km from the country's Pacific coast LPG export hub near Prince Rupert. Another LNG facility under construction is the 2.1mn t/yr Woodfibre LNG export terminal near Squamish, BC, north of Vancouver. This joint venture between Canadian midstream operator Enbridge and Singapore-based Pacific Energy is expected to be completed in 2027. Additionally, the Indigenous Haisla Nation and Pembina Pipeline reached a final investment decision for their 3.3mn t/yr Cedar LNG floating facility in Kitimat, which is set to open in late 2028. Fractionation capacity also grows The increase in natural gas production will result in higher NGL output, with about 90pc of Canada's NGL production coming from natural gas. This has driven increased demand for fractionation services in western Canada. Keyera plans to debottleneck its second fractionation unit at Keyera Fort Saskatchewan (KFS) in Alberta, adding 8,000 b/d of capacity to the existing 66,000 b/d. Keyera expects to make a final decision early next year, with potential completion by late 2026. The company has also secured customer backing to build a third KFS fractionator, which it hopes to commission in 2028. Pembina continues to advance its 55,000 b/d Redwater IV fractionation facility at its Redwater complex (RFS) in Alberta, which is expected to be online in the first half of 2026. Currently, RFS has three fractionators with a total capacity of 210,000 b/d. Calgary-based Wolf Midstream reached an FID in July to build phase two of its NGL North complex, which will include a 90,000 b/d fractionation facility, including 60,000 b/d of ethane capacity. Canadian propane exports increased to 64.9mn bl in January-October, compared with 58.7mn bl during the same period in 2023. By Yulia Golub Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: US maintenance to limit EO, derivatives


31/12/24
31/12/24

Viewpoint: US maintenance to limit EO, derivatives

Houston, 31 December (Argus) — Multiple ethylene oxide (EO) and derivative turnarounds may limit US supply in the first half of 2025. At least six producers of EO and derivatives are expected to be down for maintenance in February-June. Some are just two weeks while others are 30-45 days. Most US EO producers are integrated to produce derivatives such as monoethylene glycol (MEG), diethylene glycol (DEG) and triethylene glycol (TEG). This dynamic has market participants anticipating the derivatives will feel the supply squeeze in the first half of the year. The producers with planned maintenance have the capacity to produce over 3mn metric tonnes (t) of ethylene glycol during the five months of turnarounds, according to Argus data. These supply limitations are expected to tighten the spot market more than the contracted volumes, as the US is a typically a net exporter of MEG, DEG and TEG. Any delays in restarts or unplanned outages could quickly change the US ethylene glycol supply picture. Additionally, multiple steam-cracker maintenance projects are planned for the first quarter of 2025, which will limit supply of feedstock ethylene and likely raise feedstock costs in the short term. Some market participants see the US entering the heavy turnaround season at minimum inventories. The US is still rebuilding stocks of EO derivatives such as MEG, DEG and TEG after constraints in September and October tightened supply. Some planned and several unplanned outages occurred in September that were not resolved until mid-October. During this time, spot supply was harder to find but seasonal demand was starting to slow, according to market participants. Despite these supply constraints, exports of MEG rose by 32pc to 312,800t in September compared to a year earlier. The US exported 317,900t of MEG in October, a 53pc increase on the year. Overlapping turnarounds in the first half of 2025 could slow exports as the US is typically a net exporter of MEG, DEG and TEG. Market participants anticipate first-quarter demand to be similar to the last three months of the year with the addition of some restocking activity. By Catherine Rabe Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: US LPG exports to LatAm poised to grow


30/12/24
30/12/24

Viewpoint: US LPG exports to LatAm poised to grow

Houston, 30 December (Argus) — US LPG exports to Latin America are expected to rise in 2025 because of ongoing efforts by governments to transition low-income residences away from cooking with firewood. The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates in 2023 more than 70mn consumers across Latin America lacked access to clean cooking fuel. Industry groups promote the use of LPG as an alternative to firewood owing it its lower emissions and ease of transport into remote regions unable to be served by electricity or natural gas. Much of the LPG consumed in Latin America is imported from the US, and US exports to the region stood at around 10.6mn metric tonnes (t) from January to mid-December 2024, already surpassing the 10.48mn t shipped from the US in 2023, according to data from commodity tracking firm Vortexa. The largest demand center for US LPG in Latin America was Mexico, accounting for 35pc of US shipments to the region, down by 2.2 percentage points from 2023. The Dominican Republic accounted for 12pc of shipments, Ecuador 11pc, and Chile took 9pc. Brazil was among countries seeing the largest increase in its share of US LPG supplies, rising by 2.6 percentage points to 8.7pc this year. The Brazilian government is working to expand subsidies for LPG, also known as cooking fuel, by another 20mn low-income households next year. If the bill is passed, the measure could increase Brazil's LPG consumption from 7.6mn t to 7.7mn t next year. An estimated 5.4mn households currently benefit from the existing LPG subsidy program. LPG restrictions in Brazil — which limit the use of LPG in saunas, pool heating, commercial boilers, and as autogas in vehicles — may soon change, under a measure under consideration by Brazil's hydrocarbons regulator, ANP . Brazilian LPG association Sindigas expects a 5pc boost to LPG demand in the next five years if restrictions on commercial uses are lifted. The prospect of additional LPG demand in Brazil has already spurred investments in new infrastructure, including two new import and distribution terminals. Brazilian LPG distributor Copa Energia is part of a consortium of companies investing in a new 71,000t LPG storage facility in Suape on the country's northeast coast. Brazilian fuel distributor Ultrapar has also applied to antitrust regulators to build a new LPG terminal in Pecem port, in northeastern Ceara state, with 62,000t of storage, tentatively planned for operations in 2028. In Colombia, LPG import are also forecast to grow, largely due to its own diminishing production at Ecopetrol's Cusiana and Cupiagua fields. Colombia's LPG imports are forecast to increase to an average of 22,000 t/month in 2025, based on demand growth of 0.6pc per year, up from the average 6,900 t/month imported in January-June, Gasnova president Alejandro Martinez told Argus earlier this year. Colombia, like neighboring Brazil, is gearing up to accommodate growing demand. LPG distributor Colgas has started building a terminal at the existing 16,000 t/month Okianus port in Cartagena, scheduled to be ready in late 2025. Canadian oil company Frontera and Chilean LPG supplier Gasco plan to build a $50mn-$60mn LPG terminal at the Caribbean port of Puerto Bahia, which will include 20,400t of storage capacity and will be able to offload two very large gas carriers (VLGCs) a month. In Guatemala, Mexico's Grupo Tomza subsidiary Tropigas opened a new 1.3mn USG (31,000 bl) LPG storage and distribution facility in Escuintla in November to accommodate growing demand in the region and mitigate logistical disruptions. The Planta Palin facility in Escuintla comprises 20 storage tanks for propane and butane, and will be supplied from seaborne shipments arriving at Guatemala's Santo Tomas and Honduras' Omoa ports. Latin American LPG importers may also benefit from expanding dock capacity in the US. Both Enterprise and Energy Transfer projects are expected to add a combined 550,000 b/d of LPG export capacity out of Houston and Nederland, Texas, by the end of 2026. Enterprise's new Neches River terminal project near Beaumont, Texas, will add another 360,000 b/d of either ethane or propane export capacity. The US projects will ease tight dock capacity and the premiums for spot cargoes of propane and butane at the US Gulf coast are expected to wane by the end of 2025, incentivizing buyers in Latin America to purchase more US sourced LPG supplies. The curve ball Yet US LPG exports to Latin America could be stymied by growing supplies from Argentina, home to the prolific Vaca Muerta shale formation that holds an estimated 308 trillion cf of shale gas. Natural gas production in Argentina increased to 138mn m³/d in October, up from 130mn m³/d a year earlier, according to the latest Argentinian government data. Argentina exported 591,000t of LPG from January to mid-December, with nearly 85pc of it routed to Brazil. But Argentina also exports LPG to Brazil by tanker truck, which could also weigh on seaborne arrivals. By Giovann Rosales Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: European BD to face tighter supply in 2025


30/12/24
30/12/24

Viewpoint: European BD to face tighter supply in 2025

Houston, 30 December (Argus) — European butadiene (BD) supply is expected to tighten next year, according to market participants, because of scheduled steam-cracker closures and steady demand. European domestic demand this year helped spot prices maintain a 5-7pc premium to the monthly contract price (MCP) until December, when spot prices fell to parity with the MCP. But the lower BD MCP in December protected Europe's position as the lowest cost region after three consecutive price rollovers, even as US and Asian prices fell. Market sentiment is cautiously optimistic on consumer demand for early 2025. One producer noted that interest for spot volumes remains strong into early next year and export sales should remain resilient, especially once buying interest picks up after the Lunar New Year. European BD exports — which primarily flow to the Asia-Pacific region with one-offs to the US— were stable at nearly one shipment per month from April-December, although they were down from the prior year. Europe's BD exports totaled about 109,700 metric tonnes (t) so far this year, but there are ongoing discussions for one additional long-haul shipment loading in late December. That said, the spread between Europe and the US is forecast to remain closer to parity, narrowing the premium European sellers have obtained from moving shipments eastward. Both planned and unplanned cracker turnarounds in the US may raise prices there and open space for Europe's coastal producers to periodically capture preferred access to Asian buyers, independent of logistical bottlenecks. Currency, crackers may pressure demand Currency fluctuations may dent buyers' confidence in the coming year as a stronger US dollar lifts costs for imports, affecting selling prices of European-origin exports in dollar terms. The outcome of the US presidential election rallied the dollar against the euro and other currencies, as markets price in expected tariffs from the new US administration. The comparative strength of the US economy also drove the rally. Strong European domestic demand could undercut potential BD exports as the region's supplies gradually transition from net-long to more balanced, with ongoing structural changes transforming Europe's chemical business. The closure this year of two steam crackers in France and the Netherlands along with the planned shut down of two more crackers in Italy will reduce regional supply of crude C4, a key BD feedstock. Buyers in Italy will need to rely more heavily on Mediterranean imports of crude C4 in tandem with BD to maintain derivative operations. Cracker operators next year are likely to keep throughput curbed while running lighter feedslates, limiting availability of additional volumes of crude C4 and BD. Rail logistical constraints will linger into 2025 with at least three BD consumers depending more on this mode of transportation. The European market could see additional restructuring next year, with at least one producer weighing a review of its asset portfolio. Market participants also are watchful for announcements of unexpected closures. BD producers in the region are also concerned about price volatility for natural gas, citing weaker margins. Dutch TTF on a day-ahead basis averaged €44.66/MWh month-to-date in December, rising by 27pc from the same period a year earlier at €35.24/MWh. Dutch TTF on a day-ahead basis reached a year-to-date peak on 21 November at €48.58/MWh. Higher natural gas prices are partially due to continued complications in gas transport and supply and to accelerated storage withdrawals. By Joshua Himelfarb Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: Braskem eyes Brazil rebound


30/12/24
30/12/24

Viewpoint: Braskem eyes Brazil rebound

Sao Paulo, 30 December (Argus) — Major petrochemical producer Braskem aims to recover market share in Brazil in 2025, aided by higher tariffs and new duties on imports, after nearly two years of losses. Braskem posted $935mn of losses last year, with additional losses of $440mn spread across the first three quarters of 2024. Looking ahead to 2025, Braskem expects to increase its domestic share of polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) markets in Brazil, in part through higher import tariffs. Brazil raised tariffs on imported polymers to 20pc from 12.6pc effective on 15 October. That has already benefited the company, with sales in the fourth quarter expected to increase by $30mn from the previous quarter, Braskem said in November. Additionally, with fewer imports, Braskem's operating rates for plastic resins are expected to rise in the first quarter from around 64pc during the seasonally weak fourth quarter. In addition to the higher tariffs, Braskem is asking Brazil to apply anti-dumping duties on US- and Canada-produced PE. This could reduce the amount of this material coming into Brazil, which has surged in recent years. The case is being investigated. Braskem has requested duties on PE imports of 21.4pc from the US and 26.9pc from Canada. This would mean a 20pc import tax, plus a 21.4pc provisional dumping duty, totaling a 41.4pc tax on materials purchased from the US, and 46.9pc on Canadian PE. To put the numbers in perspective, Brazil imported 1.82mn metric tonnes (t) of PE in January-November, a 45pc increase from the same period a year before. Of the total figure, 77pc was bought from the US and Canada. Brazil's PE imports in November alone fell to 106,200t, 39pc lower than October and the lowest this year, showing the initial impact of the higher import duties. Still, November PE imports were up by 6pc from the same month in 2023 despite the 20pc import duty as well as the US dollar's appreciation to the Brazilian real since October. The Argentina case Braskem has looked to neighboring Argentina to recapture part of the sales lost to imports in Brazil during the year. Braskem's PE sales to Argentina have increased monthly through October, when the company became the largest PE exporter to Argentina. Argentina PE imports in October increased by 39pc from the same month in 2023, reaching 24,300t, a boost attributed to the reduction in the country's import duty to 7.5pc from 12.6pc in September. Brazil sold 46pc of that total, leading the market. North America lost its first position, falling to 42pc in October from 54pc a year earlier. January-October PE imports into Argentina fell to 226,800t, down by 19pc from the same period in 2023, with North America's share at 44pc and South America — represented solely by Braskem — at 39pc. Executive reshuffle As part of its efforts to become more competitive, Braskem reshuffled its executive board, aiming to improve operational efficiency and cost management. The company's new chief executive, Roberto Ramos, stepped into his role in early December, succeeding Roberto Bischoff. Ramos previously served as Braskem's vice president from 2002-2010. Ramos almost immediately announced changes for the positions of chief financial officer, head of the olefins and polyolefins South America unit, Brazil and global industrial operations, and Mexico and US operations. At the time, Braskem said that changes in the board would not affect plans for a possible sale of infrastructure company Novonor's controlling share in Braskem, Novonor said. Braskem's sale is of extreme importance to Novonor as it plans to use any proceeds to repay R14bn ($2.34bn) in debt to creditors. Braskem is the largest producer of thermoplastic resins in the Americas and a leader in biopolymer production. Fellow conglomerate Novonor holds a 38.3pc stake in Braskem with 50.1pc of voting shares, while Brazilian state-controlled oil company Petrobras holds a 36.1pc share with 47pc of voting capital. The remaining 25.6pc is split among other shareholders. By Fred Fernandes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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