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Speciality Chemicals23-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Asia-US rates for shipping
containers rose this week, leading ocean
carriers to rush to ramp up capacity to handle
an expected surge in bookings.
Rates from online freight shipping marketplace
and platform provider Freightos rose by 3% to
both US coasts, while rates from supply chain
advisors Drewry showed a 2% increase on rates
from Shanghai to Los Angeles and a 4% rise in
rates from Shanghai to New York, as shown in
the following chart.
Following the latest US-China trade
developments, Drewry expects an increase in
spot rates in the coming week as carriers are
reorganizing their capacity to accommodate a
higher volume of cargo bookings from China.
Kyle Beaulieu senior director, head of ocean
Americas at Flexport, said during a webinar
this week that carriers who initiated blank
sailings and discontinued services to the US
are now resuming services.
Beaulieu said there were 10 China-US services
that were halted, and as of today, six are
planning to resume from Week 22 to Week 24.
Beaulieu said ports in the Pacific Northwest
have been the biggest beneficiaries so far as
that is the shortest route to the US.
Alan Murphy, CEO, Sea-Intelligence, said
carriers who were reducing transpacific
capacity due to the decrease in bookings from
China amid 145% tariffs are now working to ramp
up capacity prior to the 14 August deadline.
This means that typical peak season volumes now
must be shipped no later than mid-July.
Judah Levine, head of research at Freightos,
said there is still confusion on whether July
and August deadlines mean goods need to be
loaded at origins by those dates – as was the
case with the 9 April tariff deadline – or that
goods must arrive in the US by then.
“The latter would significantly shorten these
lower-tariff windows,” Levine said. “Ocean
shipments from Asia would have to move in the
next week or two to arrive before 9 July.”
Levine noted that carriers have separately come
out with mid-month general rate increases
(GRIs) from $1,000-3,000/FEU (40-foot
equivalent unit) and have similar GRIs planned
for 1 June and 15 June with aims to get rates
up to $8,000/FEU.
“If successful, rate levels would be about on
par with the Asia – US West Coast 2024 high
reached last July,” Levine said. “Daily
transpacific rates as of Monday have already
increased about $1,000/FEU to the East Coast
and $400/FEU to the West Coast to about
$4,400/FEU and $2,800/FEU, respectively.”
Container ships and costs for shipping
containers are relevant to the chemical
industry because while most chemicals are
liquids and are shipped in tankers, container
ships transport polymers, such as polyethylene
(PE) and polypropylene (PP), are shipped in
pellets. Titanium dioxide (TiO2) is also
shipped in containers.
They also transport liquid chemicals in
isotanks.
LIQUID TANKER RATES HOLD
STEADY
US liquid chemical tanker freight rates as
assessed by ICIS held steady this
week despite upward pressure for several
trade lanes.
There is upward pressure on rates along the US
Gulf-Asia trade lane as charterers are seeking
to send cargos to the region following the
pause on tariffs. The announcement caused a
significant uptick in spot activity.
The increase in interest should be significant
but almost certainly short lived as cargoes
rush to arrive prior to the 90-day expiration
date. Several parcels of monoethylene glycol
(MEG) and methanol were seen quoted in the
market.
Similarly, rates from the USG to Rotterdam were
steady this week, even as space among the
regular carriers remains limited. Contract
tonnage continues to prevail and given the
limited available space; spot demand remains
relatively good. Several larger sized cargos of
styrene, methanol, MTBE and ethanol were seen
in the market.
Several outsiders have come on berth for both
May and June, adding to the available tonnage
for completion cargos. Easing demand for clean
tankers has attracted those vessels to enter
the chemical sector.
For the USG to South America trade lane, rates
remain steady with a few inquiries for methanol
and ethanol widely viewed in the market.
Overall, the market was relatively quiet with
fewer contract of affreightment (COA)
nominations, putting downward pressure on rates
as more space has become available.
On the bunker side, fuel prices have declined
as well, on the back of lower energy prices, as
a result week over week were softer.
Additional reporting by Kevin
Callahan
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Polypropylene23-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Braskem’s stock rose sharply
in Friday trading after reports citing unnamed
sources said Brazilian entrepreneur Nelson
Tanure would be seeking to acquire Novonor’s
controlling stake at the petrochemicals major.
At some point, Braskem’s share rose nearly 10%
on Friday, taking the whole Ibovespa stock
index in Sao Paulo higher.
By afternoon trading, however, the stock had
moderated the gain although it was still rising
nearly 6%, compared with the previous close on
22 May.
The offer was first reported by Brazilian daily
O Globo, with financial daily
Valor Economico and news agency
Reuters subsequently also publishing
reports confirming the bid, citing also unnamed
sources.
According to those sources, Tanure would be
intending to indirectly assume control
previously held by Novonor (called formerly
Odebrecht) through one of his investment funds.
The proposal includes maintaining Novonor in
the shareholding structure with a minority
stake of 3%-5%, signaling a gradual transition
strategy.
Novonor currently holds 50.1% of Braskem’s
voting shares, while Brazil’s state-owned
energy major Petrobras controls 47%.
However, the transaction depends on
negotiations with Novonor’s creditor banks –
Bradesco, Itaú, Banco do Brasil, Santander, and
Brazil’s investment bank BNDES – which hold
Braskem shares as collateral for debt estimated
at Brazilian reais (R) 15 billion ($2.65
billion).
These banks currently control 50.1% of
Braskem’s common shares, representing 38.3% of
total capital.
Any control change must also consider
Petrobras’ position as the second-largest
shareholder with significant strategic
influence.
In a written response to ICIS, Braskem said it
would not comment.
Novonor and Petrobras had not responded to a
request for comment at the time of writing.
Braskem’s financial metrics have been suffering
for several quarter due to the global
petrochemicals oversupply and low prices, which
have hit hard some of the company’s key
products such polyethylene (PE), polypropylene
(PP), or polyvinyl chloride (PVC).
Earlier in May, however, it said it had
swung
to a net profit during Q1 2025, compared to
a net loss in the same quarter a year earlier.
Its sales and earnings, however, continued
shrinking during Q1 in the year-on-year
comparison.
Braskem(in $ million)
Q1 2025
Q1 2024
Change
Q4 2024
Q1 2025 vs Q4 2024
Sales
3,331
3,618
-8%
3,285
1%
Net profit/loss
113
-273
N/A
-967
N/A
Recurring EBITDA
224
230
-2%
102
121%
WHO IS TANURE
While it has been elusive for most media
outlets to put a figure on Nelson Tanure’s
fortune – even the well-known Forbes
magazine has not put a figure on it and has not
included him in its Rich List – the
entrepreneur is considered one of Brazil’s
richest men.
His businesses span in a wide range of sectors
such energy (mostly electric utilities), civil
construction through its firm Gafisa; oil and
gas through PetroRio and investments in
the exploration of natural resources;
telecommunications, with participations in
operators Oi and TIM Brasil; and healthcare,
with Alliance Health and diagnostic
laboratories, among others.
UNSUCCESSFUL DISPOSAL SO
FARNovonor has attempted to sell
its Braskem stake for years without conclusion.
Previous interested parties included Abu
Dhabi’s energy major Adnoc, Saudi Arabia’s
SABIC – now part of oil major Aramco – and
Brazilian conglomerate J&F, owned by the
Batista brothers.
J&F reportedly offered R10 billion for
Novonor’s stake, but neither this nor the other
transactions materialized.
Novonor suffers from high leverage since the
2010s, when the company was at the center of
the large, Latin America-wide corruption
scandal known as Lava Jato in the mid-2010s.
The scandal also engulfed personalities from
the first administration of the Workers Party
(PT), the party of President Luiz Inacio Lula
da Silva, now back in power again and at the
time led by him and his successor Dilma
Rousseff.
($1 = R5.67)
Recycled Polyethylene Terephthalate23-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Senior editor for recycling Matt
Tudball discusses the latest developments in
the European recycled polyethylene
terephthalate (R-PET) market, including:
High bale costs across Europe still major
concern for recyclers
Margins are squeezed as flake, pellet price
talks continue
Cost-conscious buyers battle with high
R-PET costs compared to PET
Cheaper R-PET imports also still offered
into Europe

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Polyethylene Terephthalate23-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–The Canadian International
Trade Tribunal (CITT) has determined there is
“a reasonable indication” that the dumping and
subsidizing of polyethylene terephthalate (PET)
originating in or exported from China and
Pakistan has caused injury to Canadian
producers.
The resolution published this week follows on
from the inquiry opened in
March after producer Compagnie Alpek
Polyester Canada, a subsidiary of Mexico’s
Alpek, filed a complaint with the Canada Border
Services Agency (CBSA).
“The CBSA will continue its investigations and,
by 17 June, will issue preliminary
determinations,” said the Tribunal this week.
If successful, the investigation could conclude
advising to impose antidumping duties (ADDs)
against PET imports from China and Pakistan,
meaning PET imports from both jurisdictions
would face higher-than-average import taxes to
enter Canada.
The CITT is an independent quasi-judicial body
that reports to Parliament through the Minister
of Finance, and it hears cases on dumped and
subsidized imports, safeguard complaints,
complaints about federal government
procurement, and appeals of customs and excise
tax rulings.
When requested by the federal government, the
Tribunal also provides advice on other
economic, trade and tariff matters.
The Canadian market of imports for PET resin
was estimated at around $193 million in 2023,
and at $185 million in 2024, according to
government data.
In 2024, imports from China made up 46% of
total imports into Canada, while shipments from
Pakistan made up 28% of imports.
The two countries were second and third
suppliers of PET to Canada, after the US.
PET resins can be broadly classified into
bottle, fiber or film grade, named according to
the downstream applications. Bottle grade resin
is the most commonly traded form of PET resin
and it is used in bottle and container
packaging through blow molding and
thermoforming.
Fiber grade resin goes into making polyester
fiber, while film grade resin is used in
electrical and flexible packaging applications.
PET can be compounded with glass fiber for the
production of engineering plastics.
DAK Americas, Indorama, Nan Ya Plastics
Corporation and Far Eastern New Century (FENC)
are PET producers in the US.
Additional reporting by Melissa
Wheeler
Crude Oil23-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–US President Donald Trump has
warned of plans to impose a 50% tariff on
imports from the EU starting on 1 June.
In a post on the Truth Social platform, which
is owned by Trump, on Friday, the US President
said negotiations with the EU “were going
nowhere” and said the bloc “has been very
difficult to deal with”.
“Their powerful Trade Barriers, Vat Taxes,
ridiculous Corporate Penalties, Non-Monetary
Trade Barriers, Monetary Manipulations, unfair
and unjustified lawsuits against Americans
Companies, and more, have led to a Trade
Deficit with the US of more than $250,000,000 a
year, a number which is totally unacceptable,”
the post on social media read.
Trump went on to stipulate that no tariff would
be applied if the product was built or
manufactured in the US, but did not clarify how
this would pertain to raw materials higher up
the value chain.
As a net importer, the repercussions for the
European chemicals industry may be cushioned
from direct tariffs, although this could have
more of an impact for certain products like
benzene or paraxylene (PX).
The EU has declined to respond to the latest
announcement. On 9 May, the EU launched a
public consultation to determine which US
products should be subject to levies, including
many
chemicals and plastics.
The consultation is scheduled to remain open
until 10 June, as the EU Commission also
consults on restricting certain EU steel scrap
and chemical products worth €4.4bn to the US.
A 50% duty is an escalation from the previous
20% tariff announced by President Trump on 2
April, when levies of varying degrees were
applied to most international trading partners,
including a 10% baseline rate for the majority
of countries.
Tensions between the US and EU eased after a
90-day pause was agreed in early April to allow
time for discussions to pave the way for a deal
palatable to both parties.
Since the initial announcement, the US secured
a deal
with the UK, with a 10% tariff for auto
parts (down from 27.5%), keeping the previously
announced baseline 10% rate in place. In
exchange, the US will have increased access to
UK chemicals, ethanol, and beef markets.
The US also agreed a 90-day pause with
China on 12 May, allowing Chinese imports
to the US to be subject to a 30% tax instead of
the 145% tariff, with US goods to China held at
a 10% rate instead of 125%.
thumbnail photo source: Shutterstock
Gas23-May-2025
UK energy price cap for July-September set
at £1,720 for an average household
This has risen £152 year on year, but is
£129 lower than the Q2 cap
Forward prices for Q4 ‘25 at premium to Q3
‘25 anticipating higher winter demand
By Anna Coulson and Ethan Tillcock
LONDON (ICIS) –The UK energy price cap for
July-September will be higher than the third
quarter of 2024, energy regulator Ofgem said on
23 May, but will fall compared to the price cap
in the second quarter of 2025.
Ofgem stated that the recent fall in wholesale
prices is the main driver of the overall price
cap reduction, accounting for around 90% of the
fall, with the remainder primarily due to
changes to operating cost allowances suppliers
can recover.
If forward prices for delivery in the fourth
quarter of 2025 remain at current levels, the
wholesale component of the cap for the period
October-December is expected to be higher than
the third quarter.
RISING PRICES
ICIS assessed the British NBP gas Q3 ‘25
contract at an average of 94.400p/th from 18
February to 16 May, which was the period used
by Ofgem to calculate wholesale energy costs
for the upcoming cap.
This is 35% higher than the Q3 ’24 contract
average over equivalent dates in the previous
year.
Several factors are likely to have contributed
to elevated wholesale gas prices.
The end of Russian gas transit via Ukraine cut
around 15.5bcm/year of remaining supply to
Europe at the start of the 2025.
European gas reserves finished the winter
withdrawal season down significantly year on
year, increasing forecast summer injection
demand annually.
This supported British hub prices as higher
prices on the continent drive exports via the
BBL and Interconnector pipelines.
Investment funds amassed large net long
positions in European gas futures amid
speculation of a tight summer injection market.
Hub prices declined towards the end of the
period, trading lower on US tariffs driving
global demand reduction forecasts, and the EU
easing storage regulations, reducing expected
summer injection demand.
Gas is a key price driver for the UK power
market due to its role in power generation,
with power prices tracking the upward trend in
NBP prices.
ICIS assessed the UK power baseload Q3 ‘25
contract at an average £80.64/MWh between 18
February and 16 May, 25% higher than the Q3 ‘24
over equivalent dates.
The Q3 ’25 UK power contract is at a premium to
the European equivalents, indicating that the
UK is likely to import power through the
front quarter.
Q4 CAP OUTLOOK
On 22 May, ICIS assessed the NBP Q4 ‘25
contract at 94.525p/th, 7.950p/th above the Q3
‘25 contract.
On the same day, the UK power baseload Q4 ‘25
contract was £87.00/MWh, £6.85/MWh above the
corresponding Q3 ’25 contract.
European gas
markets continue to exhibit sensitivity to
multiple regulatory and geopolitical drivers.
US tariffs are likely bearish for global demand
due to stifling economic growth; however,
de-escalation may continue in the coming
months.
Reduced gas storage targets at the EU level may
push increased risk across the region from the
injection season into Winter ’25 delivery.
Entering the fourth quarter, cold weather and
low wind generation present risks as this would
increase heating and gas-for-power demand, with
several periods of dunkelflaute in the previous
winter causing demand surges.
French nuclear availability is another key
driver for UK power prices through the fourth
quarter.
ICIS assessed the UK power baseload Q4 ’25
contract at €102.41/MWh on 22 May, €25.61/MWh
above the French contract, indicating that the
UK is likely to import power from France.
Data from EDF on 22 May shows that French
nuclear availability is scheduled to average
57.1GW from 1 October to 31 December, 15.1GW
above the 2020-24 average amid the recent
commissioning of the 1.6GW Flamanville 3 plant.
However, downward revisions in French nuclear
availability through the fourth quarter of 2025
would be a bullish driver for French and UK
power prices
BACKGROUND
Introduced in January 2019, the price cap sets
the maximum price that energy suppliers can
charge end-users for each unit of energy.
.
Naphtha23-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Malaysia-based
LOTTE Chemical Titan (LCT) has signed a
three-year naphtha sales contract with Saudi
Aramco, according to the company in a bourse
statement.
The naphtha, estimated at between
300,000-400,000 tonnes/year, will be supplied
by Aramco’s unit in Singapore, said LCT on
Friday.
“Aramco is a major feedstock supplier of
naphtha … and has been our long-term supplier,”
the company said.
The contract will run from July 2025 to June
2028, while the pricing will be based on the
market price.
LCT operates 12 plants across two sites in
Malaysia and holds a 40% share in LOTTE
Chemical USA Corp. It has three polyethylene
plants in Indonesia through PT LOTTE Chemical
Titan Nusantara.
LCT is a subsidiary of South Korean major LOTTE
Chemical Corp under the LOTTE Group.
Ammonia23-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Brazil’s state-owned energy
major Petrobras and chemicals producer Unigel
have finally signed an agreement to end
contractual disputes related to the two
fertilizers plants in the country’s north which
had been leased to Unigel.
Late on 22 May, the companies said the two
fertilizers plants in the states of Bahia and
Sergipe (northeast) would thus return to
Petrobras’ portfolio.
The agreement must still be ratified by
Brazil’s Arbitral Tribunal.
“The agreement provides for the reinstatement
of Petrobras’ possession of the fertilizer
plants (FAFENs) in Bahia and Sergipe, and the
resumption of operations by Petrobras through a
bidding process for the contracting of
operation and maintenance services, in
compliance with applicable governance practices
and internal procedures,” said Petrobras.
“Petrobras aims to resume activities in the
fertilizer segment to create value through the
production and commercialization of
nitrogen-based products, while aligning with
the oil and natural gas production chain and
the energy transition.”
Meanwhile, Unigel said the agreement
represented the “definitive resolution of the
contractual disputes” and litigation existing
between the companies due to disagreements
about the lease for the two plants.
The deal represents the withdrawal of the
company from the fertilizers sector altogether.
The Camacari plant in Bahia state can produce
475,000 tonnes/year of ammonia and 475,000
tonnes/year of urea.
The plant in Laranjeiras, Sergipe, can produce
650,000 tonnes/year of urea, 450,000
tonnes/year of ammonia and 320,000 tonnes/year
of ammonium sulphate (AS).
FAILED FERTILIZERS
ADVENTURE
The agreement puts an end to the 10-year lease
for the plants signed by Unigel and
Petrobras in 2019.
While successful at first, as fertilizers
prices shot up immediately after the first wave
of the COVID-19 pandemic, prices started to
fall in 2022 though while prices for natural
gas rose sharply.
In 2024, Unigel idled
the two plants as high prices for gas
and low selling prices made operations
unprofitable, it said.
Along the way, Petrobras accused Unigel
of not
fulfilling the terms and conditions of
what they had agreed.
Moreover, from 2022, woes at Unigel’s
petrochemicals divisions – mostly producing
styrenics – added to those in fertilizers.
By the end of 2023, the company was forced to
enter a debt
restructuring process from which it
only emerged in 2024.
Earlier in May, Unigel presented its first
comprehensive quarterly financial metrics since
2023, when it entered the restructuring
process. Brazil’s financial regulations provide
for such a provision for companies in financial
distress.
While it posted small earnings before interest,
taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA),
the producer continued
haemorrhaging money in the first
quarter, with sales falling year on year and
posting a net loss of Brazilian reais (R) 209
million ($37 million).
($1 = R5.71)
Crude Oil23-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Japan’s core consumer price
index (CPI) rose by 3.5% year on year in April,
raising pressure on the central bank to
continue raising interest rates, official data
showed on Friday.
Headline inflation, which includes all items,
climbed by 3.6% year on year in April,
steadying from a month ago.
The Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) preferred measure of
inflation, which excludes fresh food and fuel,
rose 3.0% year on year in April, above the 2.9%
gain recorded in March.
Japan’s inflation has remained above the
central bank’s 2% target since April 2022,
prompting policymakers to gradually increase
interest rates.
In January, the BOJ raised its short-term
interest rate to 0.5% from 0.25%, a sign of
growing confidence in achieving its inflation
target sustainably.
While the BOJ has indicated further rate hikes
are likely, it must also weigh external
pressures such as potential impacts from US
tariffs against ongoing domestic price
increases, particularly in food.
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