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Commission to engage on future of EU chemicals industry

  • : Petrochemicals
  • 25/03/20

The European Commission said it will actively engage in strategic dialogue with the European chemicals industry to help it manage high energy prices and the costs of modernisation and transition. Calls for action and support have grown as more plant closures are announced and many businesses and assets are considered at risk.

"I believe we will be able to develop a plan. It will take the necessary form, though I have no announcements to make at this stage," Stephane Sejourne, the EU commissioner responsible for prosperity and industrial strategy, told Argus.

"We are starting at the level of the commissioners. That being said, the industry will, of course, be present, and we intend to develop sectoral plans with all stakeholders. We will need to examine with stakeholders how we can modernise this sector and invest in it, given the shrinking margins caused by international competition and the high energy prices in Europe," he said.

Sejourne said the plan is to "define the key challenges and the possible shape of the relevant legislative texts, while maintaining the same approach as with other sectors". Business plans will be the priority of the discussions, rather than new sectoral regulations, he said, adding that the aim is to enhance the competitiveness of the sector.

"Simplification, harmonisation, modernisation and financing will take precedence over regulation," he said.

Sejourne said he has discussed with EU ministers "the urgent need to modernise steam crackers, which are over 40 years old in Europe". These units are "environmentally inefficient, underperforming and do not enhance the sector's competitiveness", he said.

The chemicals industry will be "crucial" for other industries, Sejourne said. "As part of the reindustrialisation efforts that have been launched and the announcements made by the commission, we will need the chemical industry."

Critical Chemicals Act

Sejourne's comments came after eight European countries called for measures to support the production of key chemicals in the EU as the bloc faces pressure from rising costs and competition. The proposed "EU Critical Chemicals Act" would support the development and decarbonisation of existing chemical plants while fostering alternative carbon sources, the eight countries said.

Signatory countries — the Czech Republic, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania, Slovakia, Spain and France — highlighted 18 molecules as key to European strategic value chains, five of which they labelled as critical.

The list includes ethylene, propylene, butadiene, benzene, toluene, xylene, phenol, styrene, ammonia, methanol, chlorine, sodium hydroxide, sulphur, silicon, sodium carbonates, hydrofluoric acid, methionine and lysine. Those singled out as critical were ethylene, butadiene, benzene, ammonia and sodium carbonates.

The signatories welcomed the EU's recent "Clean Industrial Deal", a plan to turn decarbonisation into a driver of EU growth, but argued that the chemical industry needs support to successfully decarbonise. Full decarbonisation of a single steam cracker can cost more than €1bn, highlighting the scale of investment required, the eight countries said.

The European Council adopted the Critical Raw Materials Act in March 2024, which aims to protect supply chains for rare metals. Similar measures are needed for the chemical industry because they are essential to core industries including defence, health and construction, argued the signatories.

Plant closures have accelerated in Europe. Last year, ExxonMobil closed its Gravenchon cracker in France and Sabic closed one of its two crackers in Geleen in the Netherlands. Eni's Versalis subsidiary will close its two remaining crackers in Italy this year. And US firm Dow has idled one of its three crackers in Terneuzen in the Netherlands. At least three other crackers in the region have been put for sale by their owners.

Besides steam crackers, many more chemical and downstream derivatives units have either been closed, are operating at low rates or are up for strategic review or sale.


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25/03/24

India amends, finalises e-PVC anti-dumping duties

India amends, finalises e-PVC anti-dumping duties

Singapore, 24 March (Argus) — India's Ministry of Finance (MCI) has finalised anti-dumping duties (ADDs) on imports of paste polyvinyl chloride (e-PVC) from China, South Korea, Malaysia, Norway, Taiwan and Thailand. ADDs on the listed e-PVC export origins will be imposed for a period of five years from 13 June 2024, backdated to the imposition date of initial ADDs . These will be levied for e-PVC imports between 12 December 2024 and 20 March 2025, according to MCI in the Gazette of India on 21 March. As per the initial anti-dumping investigation, finalised ADDs will be excluded for PVC resin with a K-value below 60, PVC blending resins, co-polymers of PVC paste resin, battery separator resins and the brand "Biovyn" produced by European PVC producer Inovyn. Most e-PVC producers that were named under the initial anti-dumping investigation face higher finalised ADDs than their original value, except for South Korea's Hanwha Solutions, where ADDs remained at $0/t, and Malaysia's Kaneka Paste, for which ADDs dropped from $317/t to $0/t. In conjunction with this investigation, Indian authorities are also currently conducting an anti-dumping investigation on e-PVC imports from the EU and Japan . Argus last assessed e-PVC homopolymer import prices into India at $920-950/t cfr India on 21 March. By Michael Vitiello E-PVC anti-dumping duties (India) $/t Country of export Country of export Producer Initial duty Final duty China Any Formosa Industries (Ningbo) 546 595 China Any Shenyang Chemical 115 248 China Any Other Chinese producers except above 600 707 Any China Any 600 707 South Korea Any Hanwha Solutions 0 0 South Korea Any Other South Korean producers except above 41 89 Any South Korea Any 41 89 Malaysia Any Kaneka Paste 317 0 Malaysia Any Other Malaysian producers except above 375 516 Any Malaysia Any 375 516 Taiwan Any Formosa Plastics 118 247 Taiwan Any Other Taiwanese producers except above 168 373 Any Taiwan Any 168 373 Thailand Any TPC Paste Resin 195 343 Thailand Any Other Thai producers except above 252 421 Any Thailand Any 252 421 Norway Any Any 328 495 Any Norway Any 328 495 Source: India's Ministry of Finance Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Japan’s MGC, JFE to recycle CO2 to produce methanol


25/03/24
25/03/24

Japan’s MGC, JFE to recycle CO2 to produce methanol

Tokyo, 24 March (Argus) — Japanese methanol supplier Mitsubishi Gas Chemical (MGC) and steel maker JFE Steel have agreed to conduct a pilot project to produce methanol by recycling CO2, including gas derived from JFE's steel production. The project is expected to begin in the 2026 fiscal year, the companies announced on 24 March. MGC has started building a 100 t/yr methanol plant for this project in the Mizushima industrial complex, west Japan. The companies will make methanol using CO2, including gas that comes from JFE's steel production. Petrochemical company Mitsubishi Chemical will then use the methanol to produce propylene, which is a feedstock for plastics production. The new plant will be a mobile facility, as MGC is considering conducting similar methanol production trials in different places in the future. Separately, MGC is also considering launching a green methanol plant after the 2030 fiscal year, which can supply around 1mn t/yr of methanol, the same capacity as a conventional plant. The company expects an increase in global demand for methanol, especially as an alternative fuel for vessels. MGC has over 7.5mn t/yr of global methanol production capacity. The group seeks to reduce CO2 emissions by 39pc in the 2030 fiscal year compared with the 2013 fiscal year levels, and to achieve net zero emissions by the fiscal year 2050. By Kohei Yamamoto Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU opens anti-dumping probe into China adipic acid


25/03/20
25/03/20

EU opens anti-dumping probe into China adipic acid

London, 20 March (Argus) — The European Commission has opened an anti-dumping investigation into imports of adipic acid from China. Two European chemical producers, Germany's Lanxess and Italy's Radici Chimica lodged a complaint with the commission claiming distortions in China's chemical market that could result in dumping of product in export markets. Interested parties have until 29 March to request a hearing with regard to the opening of the investigation and until 20 April to comment on the complaint. China shipped 111,800t of adipic acid to the EU in 2024 according to customs data, up by 10.1pc year on year and 60pc higher than the 2019-2023 average exports of 70,000t/yr. German chemicals giant BASF is to end adipic acid production at its Ludwigshafen site this year, it said in August, commenting at the time on the "changed market environment." By Laura Tovey-Fall Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US ethane cracking margins at 10-month low


25/03/20
25/03/20

US ethane cracking margins at 10-month low

Houston, 20 March (Argus) — US ethane cracking margins have fallen to the lowest in 10 months on rising ethane cash costs and falling spot ethylene prices at Mont Belvieu, Texas, according to an Argus generic model. Ethane cracking margins on Wednesday fell to 10.5¢/lb, the lowest level since May 2024. Margins have steadily narrowed from a peak of 24.75¢/lb two months ago, when a freeze took several US Gulf coast crackers off line and spiked ethylene prices to 35.25¢/lb in a trade at the Enterprise Products Partners (EPC) system at Mont Belvieu. The decline in cash margins largely follows falling domestic ethylene spot prices as US crackers have incrementally restarted and ramped up production since mid-January. US spot EPC ethylene traded Wednesday at 24.75¢/lb, the first trade below 25¢/lb since late November. The more than 10¢/lb decline in ethylene spot prices does not fully account for eroding ethane cracking margins. Ethane costs have risen by more than a third through February and into March, hitting an 18-month high last week of 31.1875¢/USG. Higher ethane costs have largely followed higher natural gas prices at the benchmark Henry Hub, which hit a two-year high at $4.491/mmBtu on 10 March stemming from tightening US gas inventories. Natural gas prices serve as a price floor for ethane because it is separated from raw natural gas during processing. The 60pc drop in ethane cracking margins over the past two months is unlikely to affect ethane-based ethylene production, as margins of at least 4-5¢/lb are generally still profitable for cracker operators. US ethane cracking margins in 2024 averaged 14-15¢/lb, according to Argus data. Ethane structurally remains the most advantaged feedstock on the US Gulf coast and was last surpassed briefly by a competing feedstock more than 18 months ago. Propane cracking margins are currently negative and the butane cracking margin has ranged from 3.5-8¢/lb this month. By Michael Camarda Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

OMV starts up plastic-waste-to-oil unit ReOil


25/03/20
25/03/20

OMV starts up plastic-waste-to-oil unit ReOil

London, 20 March (Argus) — Austrian refiner OMV said that it has "successfully started up" the new pyrolysis chemical recycling plant at its Schwechat, Austria site. The plant uses OMV's pyrolysis technology, known as ReOil, and has capacity to process 16,000t/yr of plastic waste. ReOil is a chemical recycling technology that converts end-of-life plastics into pyrolysis oil feedstock for the production of chemicals and new plastics. OMV announced in August 2024 that it had finished building the plant and would begin work on a "gradual start-up". The plant is integrated with the petrochemical site at Schwechat, operated by OMV's petrochemicals arm Borealis. OMV said on 12 March that it had received €81.6mn of EU funding for a new, larger ReOil plant, in which it is deciding whether to invest. By Will Collins Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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