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Polypropylene17-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–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.
As part of that push, PureCycle has started a
partnership with IRPC Public Co Limited, under
which PureCycle will build a 130 million
lb/year line at IRPC’s complex in Rayong,
Thailand. IRPC is a subsidiary of PTT.
Construction should start in the second half of
2025, PureCycle said. The line should become
operational in mid-2027.
PureCycle will hold a 100% equity position, and
IRPC will retain rights for 10% of the plant’s
production.
PureCycle has plans to build another 130
million lb/year plant in Antwerp, Belgium. It
expects to receive final permits in 2026. The
plant in Antwerp should become operational in
2028.
PureCycle expects to begin construction on a
Gen 2 facility in Augusta, Georgia, US, in
mid-2026. The facility’s pre-processing (PreP)
unit should be operational in mid-2026. The
first purification line should be operational
in 2029. PureCycle also plans to add
compounding capabilities at the site, but it
did not disclose timelines.
The final Gen 2 design should have a capacity
of more than 300 million lb/year before
compounding, PureCycle said. The company will
disclose design capacity in early 2026 after it
finishes engineering.
PureCycle will build another Gen 2 line in
Thailand or Augusta.
The following table summarizes PureCycle’s
expansion plans. Figures are in millions of
pounds per year.
Site
Capacity
Belgium
130
Thailand
130
Augusta
300+
Augusta or Thailand
300+
TOTAL
860+
Source: PureCycle
PureCycle has one operating facility in
Ironton, Ohio, US, that has a capacity of 107
million lb/year.
The following chart illustrates the timeline
for the projects.
Source: PureCycle
PureCycle revealed the expansion plans when it
announced that it raised $300 million from new
and existing investors. Those investors include
Duquesne Family Office, Wasserstein Debt
Opportunities, Samlyn Capital, Pleiad
Investment Advisors and Sylebra Capital
Management.
PureCycle recycles waste PP through a
dissolution process.
Thumbnail shows PP. Image by
Shutterstock.
Diammonium Phosphate17-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Aguia Resources has received an
offer for bank financing from Brazil’s Southern
Development Bank (BRDE) for the development of
the Tres Estradas phosphate project and
upgrading a processing facility in the state of
Rio Grande do Sul.
The company said the approximately A$4 ($2.6)
million loan will fund the capital expenditure
required to start mining operations at Tres
Estradas and to upgrade the processing facility
which Aguia has leased from Dagoberto Barcellos
(DB).
The loan, which will be secured against the
project surface rights held by Aguia, is for a
period of 20 years.
The DB plant currently has a processing
capacity of approximately 100,000 tonnes/year
but Aguia plans to increase that to a minimum
of 300,000 tonnes/year by the end of 2026.
Currently within the Rio Grande do Sul, which
is one of the largest grain producing areas in
Brazil, farmers rely completely on imported
supply of phosphate.
“The offer of finance from a government owned
bank speaks volumes for the quality of the Tres
Estradas project, confirming strong
governmental and social support for the
development,” said Warwick Grigor, Aguia
Resources executive chairman.
“Shareholders should be very pleased with this
outcome as it is significantly better than
spending A$30 million on a brand-new production
facility, in both time and money, for the same
production capacity.”
A$1.00 = $0.68
Polyethylene17-Jun-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Braskem is to divest its
controlling stake at Upsyde, a recycling joint
venture in the Netherlands, as the company aims
to focus on its core chemicals and plastics
production, the Brazilian polymers major said.
The joint venture with Terra Circular was
announced in 2022 and is still under
construction. When operational, it will have
production capacity of 23,000 tonnes/year of
recycled materials from plastic waste.
Braskem’s exit from Upsyde is likely related to
the company’s pressing need to reduce debt and
increase cash flow rather than a rethinking of
its green targets, according to a chemicals
equity analyst at one of Brazil’s major banks,
who preferred to remain anonymous.
Braskem’s spokespeople did not respond to ICIS
requests for comment at the time of writing.
The two companies never officially announced
the plant’s start-up, and in its annual report
for 2024 (published Q1 2025) Braskem still
spoke about the project as being under
construction.
“Upsyde is focused on converting
hard-to-recycle plastic waste through patented
technology to make circular and resilient
products 100% from highly recyclable plastic,”
it said at the time.
“Upsyde aims to enhance the circular economy
and will have the capacity to recycle 23,000
tonnes/year of mixed plastic waste, putting
into practice a creative and disruptive model
of dealing with these types of waste.”
BACK TO THE COREBraskem
said it was divesting its stake at Upsyde to
focus on production of chemicals and polymers –
its portfolio’s bread and butter – and linked
the decision to the years-long downturn in the
petrochemicals sector, which hit the company
hard.
Financial details or timelines were not
disclosed in the announcement, published on the
site of its Mexican subsidiary, Braskem Idesa.
“Considering a challenging environment for the
petrochemical industry and a prolonged
downcycle exacerbated by high energy costs and
reduced economic activity in Europe, Braskem is
redirecting all resources toward its core
business: the production of chemicals and
plastics,” Braskem said.
“We remain committed to our sustainability
agenda, as demonstrated by our recent
investment in expanding biopolymer capacity in
Brazil and the development of a new biopolymer
plant project in Thailand.”
The company went on to say it will also
continue to maintain “several active
partnerships” to advance research and potential
upscaling capabilities for chemical recycling,
projects for some of which Braskem has signed
agreements to be off-takers for specialized
companies.
The European plastics trade group
PlasticsEurope was until this week listing
Upsyde as a project which would make a
“tangible impact by upcycling mixed and
hard-to-recycle” plastic waste in Europe. That
entry, however, has now been taken down.
Terra Circular and PlasticsEurope had not
responded to a request for comment at the time
of writing.
Braskem’s management said
earlier in 2025 the green agenda remains
key for its portfolio, adding it would aim to
leverage Brazil biofuels success story to
increase production of green-based polymers, a
sector the company has already had some success
with production of an ethanol-based
polyethylene (PE), commercialized under the
branded name Green PE.
The other leg to become greener, they added,
was a long-term agreement with Brazil’s
state-owned energy major for the supply of
natural gas to its Duque de Caxias, Rio de
Janeiro, facilities to shift from naphtha to
ethane. Last week, Braskem said that deal
could
unlock R4.3 billion ($785 million) in
investments at the site.
GREEN STILL HAS WAY TO
GOThe chemicals analyst who
spoke to ICIS this week said for the moment
there would be no sign of Braskem aiming to
trim its green agenda, which has ambitious
targets for 2030 in terms of production of
recycled materials.
He added Braskem’s shift from naphtha-based
production to a more competitive ethane-based
production will require large investments in
coming years, so a strategy to increase cash
flow as well as reduce high levels of debt
would be divesting non-core assets and the
divestment in the Dutch joint venture would be
part of that plan.
“Braskem has high debt levels, and they are
looking for ways to reduce leverage. What they
may be thinking is that, despite this
divestment in a purely green project, they can
still give a green spin to their operations if
we consider the green PE, for which they have
been expanding production,” said the analyst.
“I don’t think they would be relinquishing or
giving up any of their initiatives to go green,
but I think it’s probably part of some
initiatives they must increase efficiency and
reduce costs and capital needs. So, they
probably just saw this business as a main
candidate to be divested.”
($1 = R5.50)
Front page picture: Braskem’s plant in
Triunfo, Brazil producting green PE
Source: Braskem
Focus article by Jonathan
Lopez

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Gas17-Jun-2025
Ukraine’s high import needs spurs flurry of
CEE gas-trading activity as more transmission
corridors emerge
Grid operators vie to offer attractive
solutions, slashing tariffs or increasing
capacity
Increased CEE hub liquidity would breed
further interest
LONDON (ICIS)–Ukrainian gas incumbent Naftogaz
has become the first company in central and
eastern Europe (CEE) to use the Danish-Polish
transit corridor for spot bookings to Ukraine,
several traders active in the region told ICIS.
Sources say there is a flurry of activity
across theCEE gas market, driven primarily by
high importing interest and soaring prices in
Ukraine.
Gas in Ukraine is trading at an estimated
€9.30/MWh premium over the equivalent
front-month TTF contract.
A CEE trader said Naftogaz had made
reservations on the Danish-Polish Baltic Pipe
for a total of 1848MWh over three days to test
the route, importing gas sourced on the local
exchange.
The Polish state incumbent Orlen holds a
long-term booking for 8 billion cubic meters
annually on the Baltic Pipe to Denmark.
But the Danish grid operator Energinet is keen
to market the remaining 2bcm/year capacity for
North Sea gas or Danish VTP imports to other
regional companies.
A trader said the route was increasingly
considered by companies due to the ease of
doing business in Denmark. Anticipated lower
short-term transmission tariffs in Poland and
the doubling of firm export capacity from
Poland to Ukraine were also cited as reasons.
Last week Polish gas grid-operator Gaz-System
and its Ukrainian counterpart, GTSOU announced
the
doubling of firm export capacity to Ukraine
from six million cubic meters (mcm) daily to
11.5mcm/day from 1 July.
LNG IMPORTS VIA POLAND, LITHUANIA
Traders say they are also considering imports
from Poland’s Swinoujscie offshore
terminal or Lithuania’s Klaipeda floating
storage and regasification unit (FSRU).
However, several noted that regional countries
have limited market liquidity as the bulk of
volumes is traded on the spot market.
A source at the Klaipeda terminal told ICIS on
17 June that the company was planning to offer
more regasification slots on a spot basis in
upcoming months.
He said that there are around 33 long-term
contract unloadings each year, but operator KN
Energies is planning to offer another four to
five spot slots. He added the terminal
has a 30-day regasification capacity window
which would fit the profile of standard monthly
transmission-capacity bookings.
RAPID CHANGES
The CEE trader said the region was changing at
a very rapid pace with grid operators vying to
offer attractive solutions.
Last month, transmission-system operators in
south-east Europe said they would offer bundled
firm export capacity from Greece to Ukraine at
a discounted tariff.
The first auction for
Route 1 monthly bundled capacity will be
held on 23 June and the five operators along
the Trans-Balkan corridor will be holding a
call with regional companies on 19 June to
explain the new product.
The CEE trader said: “We’ve seen a massive
increase in firm export capacity from Poland to
Ukraine. Moldova is reportedly planning to
offer tariff discounts.
“The Greek regulator is considering offering
capacity for the superbundled capacity not only
from LNG terminals but also from the VTP.
Gaz-System said if Route 1 offers discounted
tariffs they also may consider discounting
tariffs. The southern route is more difficult
from an operational point of view but it looks
interesting,” the trader added.
Speciality Chemicals17-Jun-2025
BARCELONA (ICIS)–Europe’s chemical
distribution sector is bracing for the impact
of multiple geopolitical and economic
challenges, including the Israel/Iran conflict.
All Iran’s monoethylene glycol (MEG), urea,
ammonia and methanol facilities have been shut
down
For methanol this represents more than 9%
of global capacity, for MEG it is 3%
Brent crude spiked from $65/bb to almost
$75/bbl, against backdrop of reports of attacks
on gas fields and oil infrastructure
If Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz this
will severely disrupt oil and LNG markets
Expect extended period of volatility and
instability in the Middle East
European distributors brace for a VUCA
(volatile, uncertain, complex, ambiguous) world
Prolonged period of poor demand looms, with
no sign of an upturn
Global overcapacity driven by China,
subsequent wave of production closures across
Europe both a threat and opportunity for
distributors
Suppliers and customers turn to
distributors to help navigate impact of tariffs
and geopolitical disruption
In this Think Tank podcast, Will
Beacham
interviews Dorothee Arns,
director general of the European Association of
Chemical Distributors and Paul
Hodges, chairman of New Normal
Consulting.
Click here to download the 2025 ICIS Top
100 Chemical Distributors listing
Editor’s note: This podcast is an opinion
piece. The views expressed are those of the
presenter and interviewees, and do not
necessarily represent those of ICIS.
ICIS is organising regular updates to help
the industry understand current market trends.
Register here .
Read the latest issue of ICIS
Chemical Business.
Read Paul Hodges and John Richardson’s
ICIS
blogs.
Crude Oil17-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Business confidence in Germany
rose for the second month in a row in June on
the back of growth in investment and consumer
demand.
The ZEW economic sentiment indicator for
Germany increased to 47.5 points, up 22.3
points from
May, the economic institute said on
Tuesday.
ZEW’s June indicator for the current situation
in the country was also higher although still
firmly in negative territory at -72 points, up
by 10 points from May.
“Confidence is picking up. In June 2025, the
ZEW indicator sees another tangible
improvement,” ZEW said.
“Recent growth in investment and consumer
demand have been contributing factors. This
development also seems to strengthen the
assessment that the fiscal policy measures
announced by the new German government can
provide a boost to the economy,” the group
added.
The eurozone’s economic sentiment indicator and
current situation indexes were also higher in
June from the previous month, rising to 35.3
points (up 23.7) and 30.7 points (up 11.7)
respectively.
Ethylene17-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Malaysia’s revised sales and
services tax (SST) framework officially takes
effect on 1 July, with the expanded scope now
set to include a 5% tax on an extensive range
of petrochemical products, including
polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP).
Critical raw materials for downstream
industries affected
Capital expenditure items like machinery
now taxed
Malaysian industry body calls for further
delay in implementation
The government had first announced the revision
of items subject to the sales tax on 18 October
2024, as part of its fiscal consolidation
strategy under the 2025 budget.
Under the updated framework, more than 4,800
harmonized system (HS) codes will now fall
under the 5% sales tax bracket.
Goods exempted from the updated sales tax
include specific petroleum gases and other
gaseous hydrocarbons that are currently under
HS code 27.11.
These include liquefied propane, butanes,
ethylene, propylene, butylene, and butadiene.
In their gaseous state, the list includes
natural gas used as motor fuel.
The measure, aimed at broadening the country’s
tax base and increasing revenue, was originally
slated to begin on 1 May, but was delayed for
two months after manufacturers urged
policymakers to refrain from adding to their
financial burden.
The July revision of Malaysia’s sales tax and
the expansion of the service tax scope involve
several key changes.
The sales tax rate for essential
goods consumed by the public will remain
unchanged, while a 5% or
10% sales tax will be applied to
discretionary and non-essential goods.
The scope of the service tax will be
broadened to include new services such as
leasing or rental, construction, financial
services, private healthcare, education, and
beauty services.
This includes critical raw materials for
various downstream industries, from plastics
and packaging to automotive manufacturing.
Previously, many of these materials were
zero-rated under the SST.
The Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers (FMM)
has publicly criticized the decision,
calling it “highly damaging to industries” in a
statement released on 12 June.
According to estimates by the Ministry of
Finance, the SST expansion is expected to
generate around ringgit (M$) 5 billion in
additional government revenue in 2025.
“Although this may support the government’s
fiscal objectives, the additional tax burden
will be largely borne by businesses and has
serious implications for operating costs,
investment decisions, and long-term business
sustainability,” FMM president Soh Thian Lai
said in a statement.
Soh highlighted that with this
expansion, around 97% of goods in
Malaysia’s tariff system will now be subject to
sales tax, representing a significant
departure from a previously narrower tax
base, to one where nearly
all categories including industrial and
commercial inputs are now taxable.
Under
the new sales tax order,
4,806 tariff lines are now subject to 5% tax,
covering a wide range of previously exempt
goods, according to the FMM.
These include high-value food items, as well as
a broad spectrum of industrial goods, such as
industrial machinery and mechanical appliances,
electrical equipment, pumps, compressors,
boilers, conveyors, and furnaces used in
manufacturing processes, it said.
The 5% rate also applies to tools and apparatus
for chemical, electrical, and technical
operations, significantly broadening the range
of taxable inputs used in production and
operations.
“The expanded scope now places a direct tax
burden on machinery and equipment typically
classified as capital expenditure. This
includes items critical to upgrading production
lines, automating processes, and
scaling operations,” Soh said.
The FMM “strongly urges the government to
further delay the enforcement of the expanded
SST scope beyond the scheduled date of 1
July”, until the review is complete, and
industries are ready.
They also calling for a broader exemption list,
especially for capital expenditure items like
machinery and equipment, and a re-evaluation of
including construction, leasing, and rental
services, which they warn will “increase
operational expenses and are expected to
cascade through supply chains.”
“We are deeply concerned and caution that the
untimely implementation of the expanded scope
of taxes will exert inflationary pressure, as
businesses already grappling with rising costs
… may have no choice but to pass these
additional burdens on to consumers,” the FMM
added.
The FMM has urged the government to postpone
the implementation, citing insufficient lead
time for businesses to adapt and calling for a
comprehensive economic impact assessment.
Malaysia’s manufacturing purchasing managers’
index (PMI) continued to contract in May, with
a reading of 48.8, according to financial
services provider S&P Global.
Beyond the direct sales tax on goods, the
revised SST also introduces an 8% service tax
on leasing and rental services for commercial
or business goods and premises.
This could further compound cost burdens for
capital-intensive sectors, including parts of
the petrochemical industry that rely on leased
machinery and industrial facilities.
Focus article by Nurluqman
Suratman
Thumbnail image: PETRONAS Towers, Kuala
Lumpur
(Sunbird
Images/imageBROKER/Shutterstock)
Ethylene17-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Singapore’s petrochemical
exports in May fell by 17.8% year on year to
Singapore dollar (S$) 968 million ($756
million), weighing down on overall non-oil
domestic exports (NODX), official data showed
on Tuesday.
The country’s NODX for the month fell by 3.5%
year on year to S$13.7 billion, reversing the
12.4% growth posted in April, data released by
Enterprise Singapore showed.
Non-electronic NODX – which includes chemicals
and pharmaceuticals fell by 5.3% year on year
to S$10 billion in May, reversing the 9.3%
growth in April.
Overall NODX to six of Singapore’s top 10 trade
partners declined in May 2025, with falls in
shipments to the US, Thailand, and Malaysia,
while those to Taiwan, Indonesia, South Korea,
and Hong Kong increased.
Singapore is a leading petrochemical
manufacturer and exporter in southeast Asia,
with more than 100 international chemical
companies, including ExxonMobil and Aster
Chemicals & Energy, based at its Jurong
Island hub.
($1 = S$1.28)
Speciality Chemicals16-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Arrivals of container ships at
the busy US West Coast ports of Los Angeles and
Long Beach (LA/LB) are slowly returning to
normal after the trade war between the US and
China slowed cargo movement between the two
nations, according to the Marine Exchange of
Southern California (MESC).
Kip Louttit, MESC executive director, said the
registration process for vessels bound for
LA/LB projects a slight uptick in the coming
two weeks.
Container ships on the way to LA/LB averaged
58.9/day in January, which fell to 47.2/day in
May amid trade tensions between the US and
China.
The average has climbed to 51.8/day over the
first 14 days of June, and 52.1/day over the
past 17 days.
“This is an indicator of a slight increase in
ship arrivals over next 1-2 weeks,” Louttit
said.
Louttit said there are 17 container ships
scheduled to arrive at the twin ports over the
next three days, which is normal.
Container ships at berth at the ports of LA/LB
dipped from an average of 19.4/day in April to
15.6/day in May.
The average was 12.3/day over the first six
days of June but jumped to 15.1/day for all 14
days in June, with 21 at berth on Friday and 14
at berth on Saturday.
Maritime information specialists at MESC said
there are 49 container ships “blank sailing”
that will skip Los Angeles or Long Beach
through 1 August, which is two more than the
previous week.
Blank sailings are when an ocean carrier
cancels or skips a scheduled port call or
region in the middle of a fixed rotation,
typically to control capacity.
Peter Sand, chief analyst at ocean and freight
rate analytics firm Xeneta, said capacity is
returning to the transpacific trade – up 28%
since mid-May – as carriers react to shippers
rushing cargo during the 90-day window of lower
tariffs.
“This increased capacity and a slowing in the
cargo rush should see a return of the downward
pressure on spot rates we saw during Q1 prior
to the ‘Liberation Day’ tariff announcement,”
Sand said.
Rates for shipping
containers from east Asia and China to the US
are at 10-month highs.
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), which are shipped
in pellets. Titanium dioxide (TiO2) is also
shipped in containers.
They also transport liquid chemicals in
isotanks.
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