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Ammonia11-Dec-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US Department of
Agriculture (USDA) is expecting increases in
corn utilized for ethanol, larger exports, and
lower ending stocks, while soybean supply and
use projections are unchanged, according to the
December World Agricultural Supply and Demand
Estimate (WASDE) report.
In the monthly update, the USDA said corn used
to produce ethanol is raised by 50 million
bushels to 5.5 billion bushels. This lift is
based on the most recent data from the Grain
Crushings and Co-Products Production report and
weekly ethanol production data for the month of
November.
The agency said this data implies that corn
used for ethanol during the September to
November quarter was the highest since 2017.
The December WASDE shows corn exports raised by
150 million bushels to 2.5 billion bushels,
which the USDA said reflects the pace of sales
and shipments to date.
With no other use changes, corn ending stocks
are reduced 200 million bushels to 1.7 billion.
The season-average corn price received by
producers continues to be unchanged at $4.10
per bushel.
For soybeans, the supply and use projections
are unchanged but the monthly update has lifted
soybean oil production to 131.2 million tons,
with the USDA saying it is up slightly due to
an increase for cottonseed.
With higher soybean oil supplies and strong
export commitments to date, exports are raised
500 million pounds to 1.1 billion pounds.
The December WASDE said the season-average
soybean price is being forecasted at $10.20 per
bushel, down $0.60 from last month.
The first WASDE report of 2025 will be released
on 10 January.
Ethylene11-Dec-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–A new gas pipeline set to be
built by Energy Transfer should provide support
for natural gas and ethane prices in the
Permian producing basin, lowering the
likelihood that US chemical producers see
another period of ultra-low costs for the main
feedstock used to make ethylene.
Energy Transfer’s new Hugh Brinson pipeline,
previously known as Warrior, will ship natural
gas from the Waha Hub in West Texas, to
Maypearl, Texas, which is south of Dallas. The
first phase of the project will ship 1.5
billion cubic feet/day of natural gas.
Operations should start by the end of 2026.
Depending on demand, Energy Transfer could
concurrently start construction on a second
phase that will increase the pipeline’s
capacity to 2.2 billion cubic feet/day.
Energy Transfer’s pipeline is the second major
one announced in the past six months. Earlier,
a new joint venture announced Blackcomb, a
pipeline that can ship up 2.5 billion cubic
feet/day of natural gas from the Permian basin
to the Agua Dulce area in south Texas.
Blackcomb will be developed by joint venture
made up of Targa and WPC, itself a joint
venture made up of WhiteWater, MPLX and
Enbridge.
NEW PIPELINES TO SUPPORT ETHANE BY
REDUCING LIKELIHOOD OF NEGATIVE WAHA
PRICESThe two new pipelines
should provide West Texas with sufficient
capacity to take away natural gas from the Waha
Hub and prevent regional prices from falling
below zero.
The Waha Hub is the main pricing point for the
natural gas produced by the oil wells in the
Permian basin. Prices at the hub spent much of
2024 below zero because existing pipeline
capacity was insufficient to take away excess
supplies, which were growing because of rising
oil production and gas-to-oil ratios across the
basin.
When gas prices at Waha fall below zero, it
creates a powerful incentive for processing
plants to recover as much ethane as possible
from the gas stream. Any ethane that remains in
the gas stream is sold for its fuel value. When
gas prices are negative, producers are unable
to capture any value for the ethane left
behind.
By maximizing ethane recovery, processing
plants also free up existing pipeline space,
allowing more natural gas to be taken out of
West Texas.
The surge in ethane recovery increased the
amount of the feedstock available to the
market. At one point in 2024,
ethane prices fell below 12 cents/gal, a
low not seen since the COVID pandemic.
Since that low, the start up of the Matterhorn
Express pipeline has increased takeaway
capacity in the Permian, which caused Waha gas
prices to rise above zero. Colder temperatures
also supported prices for natural gas by
increasing demand.
Ethane prices are now trading above 20
cents/gal.
LNG, ETHANE TERMINALS ALSO INFLUENCE
COST FOR CHEM FEEDSPricing at
the Waha Hub is one of the many factors that
can influence the cost of ethane for chemical
producers.
Maintenance on one or more of the pipelines
that takes away gas from the Permian basin can
also depress Waha prices and, potentially,
those for ethane.
The proliferation of liquefied natural gas
(LNG) terminals on the Gulf Coast is playing an
increasing role in natural gas and ethane
prices.
These terminals are vulnerable to disruptions
caused by hurricanes and tropical storms that
pass through the Gulf of Mexico. These storms
can disrupt LNG operations and temporarily shut
down a large source of gas demand in the US.
If the outage lasts long enough, it can cause a
meaningful increase in US supplies of natural
gas. That can lower prices for gas as well as
the recovery cost for ethane.
Midstream companies are increasing their
capacity to export ethane overseas, which
should support prices for the feedstock.
Enterprise is adding 120,000 bbl/day of
capacity via the first phase of the Neches
River Terminal project, scheduled to come
online in mid-2025. A second phase, due online
in the first half of 2026, will add up to
another 180,000 bbl/day of ethane export
capacity.
Enterprise and Navigator are
adding ethane export capabilities as part
of the expansion projects at their existing
ethylene terminal in Morgan’s Point.
Energy Transfer is also adding 250,000
barrels/day of flexible export capacity, which
is scheduled to start up during the second half
of next year.
Similarly, new crackers will increase demand
for ethane.
The only confirmed new US cracker is a
joint-venture cracker that Chevron Phillips
Chemical and QatarEnergy should start up in
late 2026 in Texas.
Shintech could build a cracker in
Louisiana, but the company has yet to announce
a final investment decision (FID).
Insight article by Al
Greenwood
Thumbnail shows natural gas. Image by
Hollandse Hoogte/Shutterstock
Crude Oil11-Dec-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–South Korea will invest won
(W) 14 trillion ($9.78 billion) to build a new
port in the southern city of Changwon, as part
of its plans to upgrade Busan Port.
It will be unified with Busan Port to become a
new “mega port”, raising its vessel capacity to
66 when it is completed in 2045 from 40
currently, the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries
said on Wednesday.
Busan Port is South Korea’s largest and the
second-largest transshipment port globally.
Its total berth length will be extended to 25.5
kilometers (km) compared with 18.8km currently,
according to the ministry.
South Korea needed to increase its global
competitiveness amid port expansions in China
and
Singapore; as well as increased supply
chain uncertainties due to “escalating trade
disputes between countries” and conflicts in
the Middle East, the ministry said.
($1 = W1431.8)
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Polyethylene11-Dec-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Click here to see the
latest blog post on Asian Chemical Connections
by John Richardson: It is that time of the year
again when analysts need to put their
reputations on the line and make forecasts for
the following year.
So, see below five forecasts for 2025 with
detailed descriptions as follows:
There will be enough new capacity coming
onstream next year to push China closer to
self-sufficiency in some chemicals and polymers
such as polypropylene (PP). The boat has
already sailed on products such as purified
terephthalic acid (PTA) and styrene where China
has, in recent years, swung into net export
positions. What will further bolster China’s
self-sufficiency will be China’s long-term
decline in demand growth. China’s operating
rates will be higher than sometimes assumed, as
it will prioritize self-sufficiency, and
potentially more exports (see point 3) over
individual plant economics.
We are seeing a long-term shift in global
growth momentum to the much more populous and
much more youthful mega region of the
Developing World ex-China. Part of this process
involves relocation of manufacturing capacity
from China to countries such as Turkey, Mexico,
Vietnam and India for cost and geopolitical
reasons, and this will continue in 2025. Deals
will be done by the Trump administration on
tariffs as competitively priced imports will
have to come from somewhere – and because of
the intricate and complex integration of
manufacturing supply chains.
Since 2021 and the Evergrande Turning Point,
China had doubled down on exports up and down
manufacturing chains, reducing the room for
competitors in low, medium and high-value
industries. This includes its switch to net
export positions in products such as PTA and
styrene, and the potential for this to happen
in products such as PP, acrylonitrile
butadiene styrene (ABS) and polycarbonate (PC).
I, therefore, believe that antidumping, tariff
and other protectionist measures against China
will accelerate in 2025. China will respond in
kind.
First came the pandemic-related disruptions to
global container shipping and, since February
of this year, we’ve had to contend with the
Houthi attacks on shipping that have disrupted
access to the Suez Canal via the Red Sea.
Access to cost-efficient and prompt logistics
will remain a key competitive advantage in 2025
for chemicals companies as global trade flows
will remain disrupted for whatever reasons.
The ICIS numbers tell us that because of
disappointing Chinese demand, and the scale of
global capacity closures required to bring
markets back into balance, a new upcycle in
2025 is a very remote possibility. Expect no
upswing for at least the next three years
because of the scale of the shutdowns
necessary.
I could be wrong, of course. I’ve been advised
not to keep saying this, but I disagree as
nobody likes somebody who never concedes when
they are wrong, moves on from the history of
where and when they have been wrong, and
assumes that they will always be right in the
future.
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.
Crude Oil11-Dec-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China is expected to
implement a “more proactive fiscal policy” and
a “moderately loose” monetary policy for next
year, according to the country’s top officials,
amid economic headwinds and looming heavy
tariffs from the US.
Central bank likely to cut key interest
rates, banks’ reserve requirements
China 2025 GDP growth forecast to slow to
4.3% in 2025 – UOB
New US-China trade war in the offing
The policy shift was announced following a
meeting by the Political Bureau of the
Communist Party of China (Politburo) and was
meant to boost overall consumption in the
world’s second-biggest economy.
The change in monetary policy stance was the
first since 2011 amid flagging economic growth
and the prospect of high tariffs that will be
imposed on Chinese goods by the US next year,
with Donald Trump coming back to assume control
of the White House for the next four years from
20 January 2025.
The policy shift was announced ahead of the
annual Central Economic Work Conference (CEWC),
which kicked off on Wednesday.
China’s growth targets and stimulus plans for
2025 will be hammered out at the meeting which
will then be released at the National People’s
Congress (NPC) in March 2025.
“The Politburo signalled that China’s growth
target of ‘around 5%’ this year will be met and
the ‘main objectives and tasks for the year’s
economic and social development will be
successfully accomplished’,” UOB Global
Economics & Markets Research economists
said in a note on 10 December.
“We think the focus will be on releasing
long-term liquidity via reserve requirement
ratio (RRR) reductions,” said the economists.
MORE STIMULUS REQUIRED
China had set a target of 5.0% GDP growth for
2024 but has struggled to hit that benchmark
all year as high youth unemployment and weaker
demand hit production levels.
Fiscal stimulus measures were introduced
around end-September, but were deemed
insufficient for China to achieve its GDP
growth target of around 5% in 2024.
“Stimulus directed at promoting consumption
would likely have a larger impact than
investments or big infrastructure projects,”
the UOB note added.
November economic data suggest a slow recovery
in demand, but it appears unlikely that it will
recover sufficiently to achieve the growth
target next year if additional US tariffs were
imposed in 2025.
Official data showed that China’s consumer
price index (CPI) increased by 0.2% year on
year,
a five-month low.
Meanwhile, China’s
exports in November grew at a slower
year-on-year rate of 6.7% to $312.3 billion,
while imports fell 3.9% year on year on weaker
domestic demand.
Amid flagging Chinese demand, Saudi Arabia, the
world’s largest crude exporter, cut its January
Official Selling Price (OSP) for its
benchmark Arab Light crude to the lowest
level in four years.
The January OSP for Arab Light was cut by 80
cents/barrel to Oman/Dubai average plus 90
cents/barrel, the lowest level for buyers in
Asia since January 2021.
US-CHINA TRADE WAR 2.0
LOOMS
As China struggles to turn its economic
fortunes around, it faces a difficult 2025 and
a hostile US administration under Trump.
Trump’s first term as US president in 2017-2021
was characterized by a trade war launched
against China.
UOB Global Economics & Markets Research
economists are projecting China’s GDP growth to
slow to 4.3% in 2025 from 4.9% this year, “with
potentially more punitive US tariffs posing
downside risks next year”.
A consequential weakness of the Chinese yuan
from a looser monetary policy, meanwhile, makes
the country’s exports more competitive.
Like most Asian economies, China is
export-oriented and counts the US as a major
market.
For the first 11 months of 2024, China’s
total exports increased by 5.4% year on
year to $3.2 trillion amid a global economic
slowdown, while imports rose at a slower pace
of 1.2% over the same period to $2.4 trillion.
China remains a major importer of
petrochemicals, but heavy capacity expansions
accompanied with weak domestic demand in recent
years has turned it into a net exporter of
selected products, including purified
terephthalic acid (PTA).
Focus article by Jonathan Yee
Crude Oil10-Dec-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s exports in November
grew at a slower year-on-year rate of 6.7% to
$312.3 billion amid trading headwinds from a
potential wave of tariffs to be levied by the
incoming US administration.
The growth was about
half the 12.7% pace recorded in the
previous month, official data showed on
Tuesday.
Exports to the US for the month grew by 8% year
on year, while those to the EU increased to
7.2%.
Meanwhile, China’s shipments to ASEAN countries
posted a double-digit growth of 15% over the
same period.
Overall imports of the world’s second-biggest
economy in November, on the other hand, fell by
3.9% year on year to $214.9 billion on weaker
domestic demand, resulting in a trade surplus
of $97.4 billion, China Customs data showed.
For the first 11 months of 2024, China’s total
exports increased by 5.4% year on year to $3.2
trillion, while imports rose at a slower pace
of 1.2% over the same period to $2.4 trillion,
the data showed.
The country’s total crude import volume in
January-November 2024 declined by 1.9% year on
year to 50.6 million tonnes.
China is the world’s biggest oil importer and
consumer.
It is also a major importer of petrochemicals
but its self-sufficiency has been growing over
the years amid ongoing heavy capacity
additions.
Thumbnail image: At the Qinzhou Automated
Container Terminal of Beiwan Port in China on 5
December 2024.
(Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)
Ammonia09-Dec-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Fertilizer producer Yara
announced it has started production of the
first renewable ammonia in Brazil at its
Cubatao Production Complex.
The company said it has achieved a 75%
reduction in carbon footprint, compared to the
same fossil energy product, because it uses
biomethane, a purified biogas that without
additional effort replaces the use of natural
gas.
Biomethane is produced from vinasse, a
sugarcane residue in the manufacture of
ethanol, and filter cake, a residue from sugar
production and is made available in the gas
distribution network.
As the main producer of ammonia in the country,
Yara said its industrial complex is currently
the largest consumer of natural gas in the
state of Sao Paulo.
“This is the result of Yara’s knowledge,
innovation and technology applied with a focus
on decarbonization, and represents a great
milestone for the national industry and,
especially, for the Cubatao hub, which in
addition to being a global symbol of
environmental recovery, now has the potential
to lead the energy transition that Brazil
needs,” says Daniel Hubner, Yara International
vice president of industrial solutions.
Yara said this is a significant step forward in
building value chains based on renewable energy
with nitrogen used in numerous industries but
for agribusiness, the impact is enormous.
“By combining this new generation of
fertilizers with a lower carbon footprint with
our agronomic knowledge we will bring even more
value to the farmer, opening new markets and
sources of revenue,” said Marcelo Altieri, Yara
Brasil president.
“In the coffee chain, for example, the
expectation is for a reduction of up to 40% in
the carbon footprint of the harvested bean.”
The producer has stated its goal is to achieve
carbon neutrality by 2050.
Acetic Acid09-Dec-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Celanese CEO Lori Ryerkerk will
step down at the end of the year, a move that
followed the company’s decision to slash its
dividend by 95% and temporarily idle plants,
the US-based acetyls and engineered materials
producer said on Monday.
Ryerkerk will be replaced by Chief Operating
Officer Scott Richardson, who will become CEO
on 1 January.
In a statement, Ryerkerk said, “Coming out of
retirement to lead Celanese since 2019 as CEO
has been the true highlight of my career, and
I’m proud of what we’ve achieved together.”
Kim Rucker, lead independent director of the
board, said, “With Lori at the helm, Celanese
has navigated challenging macro environments
while strengthening its competitive position.
We wish her all the best in her next chapter.”
TOUGH TIMESThe
announcement of Ryerkerk’s departure comes just
over a month after Celanese missed its Q3
earnings guidance by a large margin, reporting
$2.44/share versus an earlier guidance of
$2.75-3.00. The following day, shares of
Celanese were down by as much as 25% in
afternoon trading.
During the quarter, Celanese was hit by a rapid
and acute decline from automotive and
industrial end-markets.
Automobiles are an important end market for the
company’s Engineered Materials
segment. Celanese
had increased its exposure to automobiles
with its $11 billion acquisition of DuPont’s
Mobility & Materials (M&M) business in
2022.
The acquisition proved challenging,
with Celanese outlining steps in early 2023
that it planned to take to raise the earnings
of M&M.
In addition to weakness in autos, demand
remained weak for paints, coatings and
construction, important end markets for the
company’s Acetyls segment. New capacity for
vinyl acetate monomer (VAM) came online and
outpaced demand.
Ethylene09-Dec-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 6 December.
US Manufacturing PMI for November
improves but remains in
contraction
The ISM US Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’
Index (PMI) improved to 48.4 in November – up
1.9 points from 46.5 in October, but remains in
contraction (below 50) for the eighth
consecutive month, and 24 out of the last 25
months.
INSIGHT: Brazil chems producers upbeat
as cabinet on side, but serious competitive
woes remain
The mood this week at Brazil’s chemicals
producers trade group Abiquim’s annual meeting
was notably more upbeat than a year ago, when
imports into Brazil were increasingly eating
into their market share.
US Nov auto sales rise but could face
headwinds from tariffs
US November sales of new light vehicles ticked
higher from the previous month and rose
compared with the same month a year ago, but
proposed tariffs on Mexican and Canadian
imports by President-elect Donald Trump could
create further headwinds for the industry.
INSIGHT: 2024’s relative stability in
key commodity pricing a contrast to previous US
election years
Heading into 2025, there are a plethora of
factors which chemical markets players are
tracking to see what could impact pricing and
fundamentals, but key among them is the arrival
of a new US President.
Braskem’s new CEO appoints a leaner
board as Novonor’s stake could be closer to
sale
Braskem’s new CEO Roberto Prisco has reshuffled
the company’s board, including the CFO
position, and has made it leaner with nine
members, down from 12, the Brazilian polymers
major said late on Wednesday.
INSIGHT: Global plastics plan pushed
down the road, production remains in the
spotlight
With the idea of a global binding accord on how
to handle plastics waste kicked back into the
long grass for now, negotiations have
progressed but the key points of disagreement
still seem fairly intractable.
SHIPPING: Asia-US container rates fall,
but average global rates rise as possible port
strike nears
Rates for shipping containers from east Asia
and China to the US were flat to softer this
week while global average rates rose by 6%, but
the looming strike at US Gulf and East Coast
ports could put upward pressure on rates in the
coming week.
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