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Ethylene02-Jul-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US will impose 20% tariffs
on imports from Vietnam and 40% tariffs on
transshipments – while Vietnam will charge no
tariffs on US imports, according to a trade
agreement that the US president announced on
Wednesday.
“The Terms are that Vietnam will pay the United
States a 20% Tariff on any and all goods sent
into our Territory, and a 40% Tariff on any
Transshipping,” President Donald Trump said on
social media. “In return, Vietnam will do
something that they have never done before,
give the United States of America TOTAL ACCESS
to their Markets for Trade. In other words,
they will ‘OPEN THEIR MARKET TO THE UNITED
STATES,’ meaning that, we will be able to sell
our product into Vietnam at ZERO Tariff.”
The transshipment tariff would discourage China
or other countries using Vietnam as an
intermediary to export goods to the US under
more favorable trade terms.
Meanwhile, tariffs are not paid by the country
of origin. Instead, they are
a tax levied by the government on the importer
of record.
The government of Vietnam has not confirmed the
tariff rates, but it did say that the
negotiating delegations of the two countries
had reached a joint statement on what it called
“a fair, balanced reciprocal trade agreement”.
Vietnam also urged the US to recognize it as a
market economy and to lift export restrictions
on certain high-tech products.
Vietnam is the sixth largest source of imports
by value to the US in 2024, with shipments
totaling $136.5 trillion.
The US had initially proposed tariffs on
Vietnamese imports of 46% on 2 April. Those
were soon lowered to 10% during a 90-day pause
that is scheduled to end on 9 July.
VIETNAMESE TRADE DEAL TO HAVE LITTLE
IMMEDIATE CHEM EFFECTFor now,
the trade deal will have little immediate
effect on shipments of plastics and chemicals
between the countries.
The US imports small amounts of plastics and
chemicals from Vietnam.
Electronic machinery, parts for nuclear plants
and furniture made up more than 60% of the
goods the US imported from the country in 2024.
Organic chemicals, plastics and rubber each
made up less than 5% of total US imports from
Vietnam in 2024.
For US exports to Vietnam, plastics made up the
second largest category, accounting for 6.37%
of the total in value.
On a volume basis, some of the largest plastic
exports from the US to Vietnam include linear
low density polyethylene (LLDPE), high density
polyethylene (HDPE) and polyvinyl chloride
(PVC), according to ICIS.
In total, the US exported $11.4 trillion to
Vietnam in 2024.
US imports will play a larger role in Vietnam’s
chemical industry after the completion of the
Long Son Petrochemicals Complex, which will
include a cracker that can use ethane or
propane as a feedstock. The complex will
receive ethane from the US
under a 15-year deal between Enterprise
Products and Siam Cement Group (SCG) which owns
the subsidiary that is developing the complex.
VIETNAM IS SECOND TRADE DEAL FOR
USVietnam joins the UK among the
countries that reached trade arrangements with
the US since
it announced on 9 April a 90-day pause on
its proposed reciprocal tariffs on imports from
most of the world.
Under the UK agreement, the US will
preserve its 10% baseline tariffs on imports
from the UK. It will relax its sectoral tariffs
on UK imports of automobiles and eliminate them
on imports of steel and aluminium. The UK made
concessions on US imports of ethanol and beef.
The US and China are working under a different
arrangement under which the two countries
agreed to pause their proposed triple-digit
tariff increases through to mid-August.
The US and Canada
seek to reach a trade agreement by 21 July.
Thumbnail shows a type of container ship
that features prominently in trade. Image by
Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock.
Hydrogen02-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–On 2 July, a spokesperson for
energy supplier E.ON told ICIS that its
“international hydrogen imports, hydrogen
production, and midstream activities will be
deprioritized” as part of the company’s
integration of its green gas business into its
energy infrastructure solutions (EIS) business
unit.
E.ON confirmed that this includes the
cancellation of its proposed 20MW
HydroHarbourEssen plant in Essen, Germany. It
was expected to produce 2,300 tons of renewable
hydrogen per year by 2027.
The company also confirmed it had exited the
H2.Ruhr project, a collaboration with Enel,
Iberdrola, ABB and SAP to construct a hydrogen
pipeline in the Ruhr area of Germany, proposed
to initially connect Essen and Duisberg.
Announced in 2021, the project targeted
delivery of up to 80,000 tons of renewable
hydrogen and ammonia per year.
This is the latest blow to the German hydrogen
industry, after steel manufacturer
ArcelorMittal announced last month that it had
cancelled its renewable hydrogen-based
decarbonisation plans for two of its steel
plants in Bremen and Eisenhuttenstadt, despite
securing €1.3 billion in subsidies.
This was followed by postponements of EWE’s
50MW project in Bremen and LEAG’s 10MW plant in
Lusatia.
“National and European overregulation
undermines the economic viability of renewable
energy sources” a spokesperson for EWE told
ICIS at the time.
“The energy sector and industry cannot shoulder
the ramp-up alone. Policymakers must now act
swiftly to establish reliable framework
conditions and targeted incentives to make
investments in hydrogen technologies
economically viable.”
“Uncertainty regarding availability and prices
in a future hydrogen market is high” a
spokesperson for LEAG told ICIS.
“The end of the German Ampel government last
year has indefinitely delayed the
implementation of the federal Power Plant
Safety Act, a key regulatory pre-condition.”
E.ON said that the company “will focus on
integrated, B2B [business-to-business]
customer-oriented hydrogen solutions within the
framework of EIS. This will enable us to create
an even more attractive portfolio of solutions
to support our B2B customers”.
It added that the company is “convinced that
green hydrogen will play a role in a
decarbonized energy future, especially for
hard-to-decarbonize industrial B2B sectors”.
In 2024 E.ON had selected technology group
Andritz to complete feasibility studies for the
HydroHarbourEssen project.
Germany targets 10GW electrolyzer capacity by
2030.
Power02-Jul-2025
Energy regulator designates OPEM as NEMO
ahead of market integration
Exchange to start spot operations by
year-end, traders
Moldova must launch a functional
electricity balancing market
LONDON (ICIS)–Moldova has come a step closer
towards EU electricity market coupling after
adopting landmark legislation and designating
OPEM, a subsidiary of the Romanian state
electricity exchange OPCOM, as its nominated
electricity market operator (NEMO).
The Moldovan parliament has adopted a new
electricity law which will transpose key
provisions of the Energy Community’s
electricity integration package as a
preliminary move towards full participation in
the EU’s single day-ahead and intra-day
markets, according to a statement by the Energy
Community on 1 July.
The electricity integration package (EIP)
enables full market integration of contracting
parties into the single European market for
electricity.
As a contracting party of the Energy Community,
an international institution tasked to extend
the EU’s single market to neighboring states,
Moldova is required to align its electricity
and gas market regulations with the EU.
Once transposed, the act is expected to help
stabilize prices, boost energy resilience, and
improve the management of renewable flows,
especially following the launch of one of the
country’s first green energy tenders earlier
this year.
The Energy Community said it would continue to
work with Moldovan authorities to support the
swift adoption of the remaining five network
codes and guidelines for electricity markets.
These include rules related to forward capacity
allocation, capacity allocation and congestion
management, electricity balancing, system
operation and the network code on emergency and
restoration.
Under the latest legislation, Moldova is
expected to set up a spot market which will
then ensure the full coupling of the Moldovan
electricity market with those of the EU and
neighboring Ukraine, also a contracting party
of the Energy Community.
The spot market will be launched by OPEM, and
traders active regionally say it should be
ready before the end of the year.
Shortly after the adoption of the electricity
law on 26 June, the regulator ANRE designated
OPEM as the country’s NEMO, an entity mandated
to operate the coupled day-ahead and intra-day
integrated electricity markets in the EU.
A local market source welcomed the news but
said Moldova should first establish its
electricity balancing market.

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Polyester Staple Fibres02-Jul-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Continued regulatory uncertainty
over the status of bio-based plastics and
pyrolysis oil within the EU is hampering demand
from the petrochemicals sector, stalling
investment, and fragmenting prices by end-use
for both bio-naphtha and pyrolysis oil.
Regulation will dictate future end-use
share between chemicals and fuel
Regulation could turbocharge demand
Regulatory uncertainty challenging
investment cases and fragmenting markets
Regulation has the potential to significantly
boost chemicals market consumption for both
materials – as it has done for packaging grades
of mechanical recycling in Europe – and to
speed the transition away from fossil-derived
material.
Nevertheless, a lack of regulatory clarity and
impetus has seen chemicals buying interest in
both markets reduce in 2024 and 2025 (albeit
from a high base) and made financing for new
projects and infrastructure challenging.
Differing accounting rules for mass-balance,
for example, drastically alter potential
profitability, and a lack of clarity makes it
challenging to predict return on investment.
The impact of the uncertainty has intensified
as wider conditions across European chemicals
and financial markets have deteriorated in the
wake of the energy and cost of living crises.
With both sectors remaining nascent, this will
likely impact on scalability timeframes for
both.
For both markets the uncertainty centers on
mandatory sustainability targets under the
Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR)
and End of Life Vehicle Regulation (ELVR)
definitions, and mass-balance accounting rules.
PPWRUnder the PPWR, the
European Commission will be required to review
the state of technological development and
environmental performance of bio-based plastic
packaging within three years of the
legislation’s entrance in to force (which
occurred in Q1 2025).
Following the review, the Commission will be
required to bring forth legislative proposals
for targets to increase the use of bio-based
plastics in packaging. This will include the
possibility of bio-based material contributing
to recycling targets for food-contact material
where recycled material is not available.
For pyrolysis oil, there remains lingering
uncertainty on definitions under Directive
2008/98/EC – also known as the Waste Framework
Directive – which forms the basis of the
majority of EU recycling legislation
definitions.
That directive defines recycling as “any
recovery operation by which waste materials are
reprocessed into products, materials or
substances whether for the original or other
purposes. It includes the reprocessing of
organic material but does not include energy
recovery and the reprocessing into materials
that are to be used as fuels or for backfilling
operations.”
This has left the legal status of chemical
recycling uncertain, particularly for
pyrolysis, because pyrolysis oil conversion is
an intermediate stage prior to conversion into
recycled plastics.
ELVRThe ELVR, meanwhile,
remains at an early stage of its regulatory
chain. The European Parliament committee on the
environment, climate and food safety and the
committee on the Internal Market and consumer
protection proposed a series
of amendments to the European Commission’s
draft revision of its end-of-life vehicle
regulation – including the allowance of
bio-based material to count towards mandatory
recycled targets proposed for the sector.
The EU Council, meanwhile, adopted its position
on 11 July, which stands in stark contrast. The
EU Council is proposing that by seven years and
11 months after the entry in to force of the
bill, the Commission should review the
environmental performance and technological
development of bio-based plastic in vehicles
and propose legislation for bio-based plastic
targets, sustainably requirements and whether
bio-based plastic might count towards or be
separate from recycled content targets.
There are also differences in the approach to
the recycled content targets themselves. The EU
Council’s position is for a graduated target
with new vehicles needing to contain 15%
recycled plastic six years after the regulation
comes into force, 20% recycled plastic content
after eight years, and 25% after 10 years. For
each target 25% of the recycled plastic would
need to have originated from end-of-life
vehicles.
The European Parliament committees’ recommended
position is for a 20% recycled plastic target
six years after the regulation comes in to
force, with 15% of that needing to come from
end-of-life vehicles. Its position is to allow
both post-consumer and pre-consumer material to
count towards the targets, and would allow
bio-based plastics and chemically recycled
material to count towards these targets.
MASS-BALANCE ACCOUNTINGEven if
both pyrolysis oil and bio-naphtha are accepted
as counting towards both the PPWR and ELVR,
given that both are used as a naphtha
substitute in a cracker and typically
co-processed with virgin naphtha, many see the
acceptance of mass-balance as an essential
enabler for chemical recycling to count towards
recycling content thresholds.
There have been different proposed
accounting rules for mass-balance, all
of which alter the possible recycled polymer
output allocations, and therefore profitability
throughout the chain, competitiveness against
other regions that may adopt different rules,
and the sector’s attractiveness to investors.
The EU’s Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) had
been due to take a decision on mass-balance
accounting rules under the single use plastics
directive (SUPD) at the end of March 2024. It
was understood from players familiar with the
matter that the TAC decision was delayed due to
ongoing discussions with regulators. It was
then expected that a decision would be
announced before the end of 2024, but this did
not occur.
An EU Commission policy advisor confirmed via
email to ICIS that “the Commission is preparing
an implementing act (planned for Q4/2025) that
will extend the calculation, verification and
reporting methodology to cover all recycling
technologies, including chemical recycling”,
under the SUPD.
While this would only be applicable directly to
the SUPD, it is seen as precedent-setting for
other pieces of legislation, and would set out
the EU’s general approach, giving some clarity
to markets.
FUEL LEGISLATION OUTPACING PLASTIC
LEGISLATIONLegislation
surrounding renewable fuels meanwhile, enjoys
greater clarity, and targets under legislation
such as the Renewable Energy Directive (RED)
III and the ‘fit for ‘55’ package are
encouraging the use of both pyrolysis oil
(under the fit for ’55 package fuel derived
from plastic waste can count towards targets
such as those for sustainable aviation fuel
(SAF) provided it meets certain criteria such
as demonstrating emissions reduction).
FRAGMENTATION OF
PRICESEurope pricing for
bio-naphtha is becoming increasingly fragmented
depending on feedstock origin. As the market
develops further, fragmentation is expected,
based on whether the material is co-processed
or not.
The main feedstock routes for bio-naphtha
include:-
Used cooking oil (UCO)
Crude tall oil (CTO)
Tallow
Typically, CTO-derived bio-naphtha trades at a
premium to UCO-derived, with tallow showing the
lowest achievable values. This is being driven
by usage in gasoline blending to meet road fuel
mandates, tighter overall supply, and a
preference among some brand owners for
CTO-derived (which is a by-product of wood pulp
production) because of its traceability.
Coupled with this, a significant premium is
being charged for material accompanied by Life
Cycle Assessment (LCA) data in particular, as
companies increasingly focus on carbon
reduction goals. ISCC EU certified
material commands the highest premium for
bio-naphtha with values heard as high as
€1,900/tonne ex-works Europe this week. ISCC EU
certification verifies compliance with RED III.
ISCC+ material meanwhile, is a voluntary
certification scheme commonly used for
chemical-bound material.
Refineries, using bio-naphtha for fuel uses to
meet targets under legislation such as the
Renewable Energy Directive III (RED III), were
understood to be more willing to consider a
wider variety of bio-naphtha origins than
chemicals.
Chemical demand for bio-naphtha is currently
concentrated on used UCO- and HVO-derived
routes.
USE OF TYRE-DERIVED PYROLYSIS OIL TO
MEET BIO-FUEL TARGETSTyre-based
pyrolysis oil producers are increasingly
separating out bio-attributed content and
polymer content in pyrolysis oil production,
with bio-attributed content attracting premiums
compared with polymer-derived tyre-based
pyrolysis oil.
Prices for bio-attributed material have been
heard at up to $1,200/tonne FD Europe for
imported material this week, and have been
heard at around €1,000/tonne ex-works Europe in
recent weeks. Alongside supply shortages,
higher prices compared with polymer-derived
material are because tyre-based pyrolysis oil
is viewed as a relatively cheap source of
biogenic content compared to alternatives such
as bio-naphtha.
Regulation will be a key driver of future
overall pyrolysis oil and bio-naphtha demand
and investment. Beyond that it will dictate
which grades develop the greatest traction and
the proportion of the market serving chemicals
and fuel usage. The sooner the EU brings
clarity to its approach, the sooner these
markets will scale.
Insight by Mark
Victory
ICIS is currently researching bio-naphtha
pricing in Europe. If you’re interested in
learning more, and to share your views on the
market, please contact mark.victory@icis.com
ICIS assesses more than 100 grades
throughout the recycled plastic value chain
globally – from waste bales through to pellets.
This includes recycled polyethylene (R-PE),
recycled PET (R-PET), R-PP, mixed plastic waste
and pyrolysis oil.
Thumbnail image credit: Shutterstock
Linear Low-Density Polyethylene02-Jul-2025
MUMBAI (ICIS)–India has launched an
anti-dumping investigation into imports of
linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) from
five countries from the Gulf Cooperation
Council (GCC), as well as Malaysia.
Imports from Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia,
the UAE and Malaysia will be probed, based on
the notification issued by India’s Directorate
General of Trade Remedies (DGTR) on 30 June
2025.
The investigation was prompted by a petition
from the Chemicals and Petrochemicals
Manufacturers Association (CPMA).
Ethylene02-Jul-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asia’s manufacturing sector
exhibited signs of further weakness in June,
with most economies in the region registering
purchasing managers’ index (PMI) readings of
below 50, indicating a deepening slump in
factory activity.
US not keen to extend tariff pause, which
expires 9 July for most trade partners
Global trade tensions, US tariffs weigh on
Asian factories
ASEAN manufacturing PMI falls for third
month; June reading at 48.6
The downturn, marked by falling orders, reduced
output, and job cuts in export-reliant
economies such as Taiwan, Vietnam, South Korea,
and Indonesia, is largely driven by persistent
global trade tensions, according to surveys
done by financial intelligence firm S&P
Global.
Concerns are heightened as the 90-day
suspension of the US’ “reciprocal” tariffs is
set to expire next week, threatening
significant disruption to Asia’s exports to the
world’s biggest economy.
“The fallout from tariff uncertainty dampened
demand and business confidence, as firms scaled
back or canceled orders, impacting output, new
orders, employment, and purchasing activities,”
consulting firm McKinsey & Co noted.
While
China’s official manufacturing PMI edged up to
49.7 in June from 49.5 in May, it
marked the third consecutive month the
index has remained below the 50-point expansion
threshold.
The continued contraction suggests limited
impact from the US-China tariff truce achieved
in early May, analysts at Japan’s Nomura Global
Markets Research said in a note.
A 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs on US’
trading partners ex-China declared on 10 April,
is scheduled to expire on 9 July. For China, a
separate three-month period of reduced tariffs
agreed with the US on 14 May – which set US
tariffs at 30% and Chinese duties on US imports
at 10% – is set to end around 12 August.
Meanwhile, other export-reliant economies like
Taiwan and Vietnam saw their PMIs deteriorate
in June, with factories reporting continued
declines in new orders, output, and staffing as
ongoing trade tensions dampen demand.
Other Asian nations reporting PMIs that
remained firmly in contraction territory were
Malaysia and Indonesia. The latter, which is
southeast Asia’s biggest economy, was the worst
performer in the region, with a June PMI
reading of 46.9.
Manufacturing and exports heavyweight South
Korea posted a PMI reading of 48.7 in June, up
from May’s 47.7, but the gauge was still well
below the 50 threshold of expansion.
South Korea’s exports in June rose by 4.3%
year on year to $59.8 billion, reversing the
1.3% contraction in May, although shipments to
the US and China remained weak amid tariff
uncertainty.
The S&P Global ASEAN manufacturing PMI fell
to 48.6 in June from 49.2 in May, marking the
third straight month that the headline figure
has fallen below the 50-mark.
The deterioration in the region’s manufacturing
health was the worst since August 2021, it
said.
A sharper decrease in new orders was
accompanied by more substantial cuts to
staffing levels and purchasing activity, with a
marginal decline in production.
“Both new orders and output remained in
contraction territory since April. Recent
figures revealed a sharper decline in incoming
new orders for ASEAN goods producers, marking
the most significant drop since August 2021,”
S&P Global said.
INDIA REMAINS BRIGHT SPOT; CHINA SHOWS
SIGNS OF RESILIENCE
India’s manufacturing sector remains a
significant bright spot in Asia, with June PMI
hitting a 14-month high of 58.4 in June,
largely driven by stronger external demand,
according to a private survey conducted by
financial institution HSBC in partnership with
S&P Global.
Robust end-demand fueled expansions in output,
new orders, and job creation at Indian
factories last month, according to S&P
Global.
To keep pace with this strong demand,
particularly from international markets as
evidenced by a substantial rise in new export
orders, Indian manufacturing firms reduced
their existing stockpiles. This resulted in a
continued shrinkage of finished goods stock, it
said.
For China, a private survey of small-to-medium
manufacturers conducted by Chinese media group
Caixin indicated an expansion in June, with PMI
reading rising to 50.4 from 48.3 in the
previous month.
The Caixin PMI surveys small and medium-sized
enterprises (SMEs) as well as export-oriented
enterprises located in eastern coastal regions,
while the official PMI is tilted toward larger
state-owned enterprises.
The headline June PMI reading marked the eighth
month of growth in the manufacturing sector out
of the past nine months, “showing that market
conditions were improving”, said Wang Zhe,
senior economist at Caixin Insight Group.
“However, external demand remained weak,” Wang
said, adding that exports of consumer goods
remained under pressure due to additional US
tariffs, causing new export orders to contract
for a third straight month.
LATEST PMI DATA A WARNING
SIGN
Markets are closely watching Trump’s next move
regarding reciprocal tariffs, which were
supposed to take effect in April but were
paused for 90 days to facilitate negotiations
with about 60 trading partners.
Trump said on 1 July that he is not considering
delaying the 9 July deadline for higher tariffs
to resume.
Despite the US pledging new trade agreements
after 4 July, following broad frameworks with
China and Britain, significant uncertainty
persists.
For Japan, US trade relations appear to be
souring, with Trump initiating a new round of
brinkmanship, threatening the world’s
fourth-biggest economy and a major global car
exporter with fresh tariffs over the latter’s
reluctance to accept US rice exports.
Trump on 1 July said tariffs as high as 30% or
35% could be imposed on Japan – higher than the
24% reciprocal tariffs set in April for the key
Washington ally.
Trump sounded more optimistic on reaching a
trade deal with India, with India’s external
affairs minister S Jaishankar saying that a
deal will require “give and take” and finding a
“meeting ground” ahead of the 9 July deadline.
As for China, US Treasury Secretary Scott
Bessent announced on June 27 that US tariffs on
Chinese imports would now start at 30%, while
maintaining a 20% fentanyl levy on China.
The “fentanyl levy” is an additional tariff
specifically imposed on Chinese imports due to
concerns that China is allegedly a source of
precursor chemicals used to produce fentanyl, a
highly potent synthetic opioid that has fueled
a severe overdose crisis in the US.
China’s exports to the US accounted for 14.6%
of the northeast Asian country’s total exports
last year.
“The US-China 90-day pause in reciprocal
tariffs will end on 13 August, by when we
expect a trade deal to be announced or a
further extension of the deadline,” said Ho
Woei Chen, economist at Singapore-based UOB
Global Economics & Markets Research.
Insight article by Nurluqman
Suratman
Thumbnail image: Production scene of
Jiangsu Shagang Group Huigang Special Steel Co
in Huai’an, Jiangsu Province, China, on 3
January
2025.(Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)
Visit the ICIS Topic Page: US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy.
Speciality Chemicals01-Jul-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Rates for shipping containers
from east Asia and China to the US will
continue to face downward pressure on capacity
increases to the major trade lane.
Market intelligence group Linerlytica said on
Tuesday that carriers have not been able to
scale back the large capacity influx introduced
on the route since the end of May, when the US
reduced reciprocal tariffs on Chinese
goods from a prohibitive 145% to a more
manageable 30%.
Rates from Shanghai to both US coasts on the
global Shanghai Containerized Freight Index
(SCFI) continue to slide, as shown in the
following chart.
And capacity is expected to continue rising in
July, Linerlytica said, as several carriers
have already committed to vessel charters
before the current market slump.
Judah Levine, head of research at online
freight shipping marketplace and platform
provider Freightos, said the surge of Chinese
goods appears to be losing steam and that
carriers likely added too much capacity,
especially to the West Coast.
Rates from Asia to the West Coast more than
doubled from around $3,000/FEU (40-foot
equivalent units) from May to June.
“But by the end of last week these demand and
capacity factors combined to push transpacific
container rates down sharply,” Levine said.
“Last week’s average of $3,388/FEU is 43% below
the June peak, although this price is still 22%
higher than the end of May.”
Rates to the East Coast behaved similarly
although not as dramatically as demand was
stronger on the shorter West Coast trade lane,
Levine said.
Average spot rates from ocean and freight rate
analytics firm Xeneta have also fallen
dramatically, as shown in the following chart.
Peter Sand, chief analyst at Xeneta, said
capacity is now more than meeting demand,
leading shippers to push back on peak season
surcharges.
“The Transpacific into US West Coast is the key
battleground for carriers when it comes to
China exports, so spot rates have fallen harder
and faster as they prioritized bringing
capacity back onto this trade in the immediate
aftermath of the lowering of 145% tariffs,”
Sand said.
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.
Visit the US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy topic page
Visit the Logistics: Impact on
chemicals and energy topic page
Crude Oil01-Jul-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Mexico is to face the
steepest oil production decline globally,
with output projected to fall 680,000
barrels/day to 1.29 million barrels/day in
the next five years, according to forecasts
by the International Energy Agency (IEA) this
week.
Such a fall in production could potentially
transform the country into a net importer of
approximately 500,000 barrels daily by 2030,
said the IEA.
Mexico is set to dominate total oil capacity
losses globally and represented the largest
single-country capacity reduction worldwide
in the IEA’s Oil 2025 report, an annual
research report about the crude oil sector.
Currently, Mexico produces just below 2
million barrels/day, despite repeated targets
for the state-owned energy major Pemex –
which dominates the market – to surpass that
2 million barrel/day mark. As output remains
pressured, the target does not feature
anymore in Pemex’s forecasts.
To put the current Mexican output into
perspective, just two decades ago the country
was churning out nearly 3 million
barrels/day.
According to the IEA, if Mexico’s crude
output is to recover past peaks, it will not
do so in this decade:
Crude
output
(in million barrels)
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
Mexico
1.97
1.84
1.74
1.60
1.47
1.40
1.29
Source: IEA
The Latin American producer posts the largest
output drop not only among members of the
crude oil producing cartel OPEC+ but also
across all global producers – a clear sign of
Mexico’s deeply pressured crude oil market.
This dramatic decline threatens Mexico’s
historical role as a significant regional oil
exporter and underscores mounting pressures
on Pemex.
Mexico’s long-term production decline since
the early 2000s posted a brief respite from
2021-2023 as the Quesqui condensate field
ramped up operations.
However, structural issues have overwhelmed
temporary gains, with Pemex severely
curtailing planned investments during the
pandemic while the previous administration
demanded focus on quick crude growth from
onshore and shallow-water fields at the
expense of larger deep-water reservoirs, said
the IEA.
The fate of Pemex matters a lot to Mexico’s
chemicals sector. The company is not only the
main supplier of feedstocks to the industry,
but also has several idle petrochemicals
assets which several companies would be
mulling to revitalize.
While some sources in chemicals
think Pemex is “beyond remedy”, the
country’s chemicals trade group Aniq said in
an interview with ICIS
that fixing Pemex’s financial and operational
issues, giving more certainty to investors
and the public at large, could unlock as much
as $50 billion in chemicals investments over
the next decade.
This week, the IEA said: “As of 2024, over
half of Pemex’s production came from just
seven of its 240 fields. Looking forward,
challenges remain with Pemex carrying a high
debt load and only one major project slated
to see first oil by 2030. Output declined by
close to 160,000 barrels/day year on year in
H1 2025.
“Fiscal changes, large unpaid debts to its
suppliers and upstream budget cuts have seen
oil rigs slashed from 50 in October 2024 to
fewer than 20 in less than six months –
although recently some payments reportedly
have been made and five rigs have returned to
work,” it concluded.
Pemex had not responded to a request for
comment at the time of writing.
Mexico’s ministry of energy (Secretaria de
Energia) had not responded to a request for
comment at the time of writing.
Despite Pemex’s commanding role in Mexico’s
crude oil sector, some private producers are
expected to offset slightly the overall fall
in output. Australia-headquartered miner
Woodside plans to start up its 100,000
barrel/day Trion project in 2028.
Woodside had not responded to a request for
comment at the time of writing.
More potential projects include pending final
investment decisions (FIDs) by Pemex on the
Zama field and the Ku-Maloob-Zaap expansion,
but the IEA was skeptical they could be
producing oil before the next decade.
“The window to see production from these two
developments before the end of our forecast
[to 2030] is closing,” said the IEA.
As well as for time, the Mexican crude sector
also faces other pressures such as regulatory
uncertainties, financing constraints and
technical challenges associated with
developing increasingly complex reservoirs,
it added.
REFININGMexico’s
production crisis occurs alongside efforts to
boost downstream capacity through domestic
refining expansion, but once again Pemex is
facing difficulties increasing refinery
output while seeking to substitute imports
with domestic product production.
Its much-publicized but much-delayed 340,000
barrel/day Olmeca refinery in Dos Bocas on
the Gulf of Mexico is currently ramping up
operations and expected to reach full
capacity in 2026, according to the IEA.
This downstream expansion represents a major
milestone alongside Pemex’s comprehensive
overhaul program for six existing refineries,
including upgrading units at Tula, Salina
Cruz and Salamanca.
Supported by approximately $8 billion in
planned investments, Mexico aims to achieve
self-sufficiency and retail price stability.
But the IEA said those expectations may well
prove futile because success in refining
expansion paradoxically would highlight the
crisis itself, because if downstream targets
are achieved by 2030, Mexico will need to
import crude to cover that demand in refinery
capacities.
“Mexico aims to secure self-sufficiency and
retail price stability via increased
production of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel,”
said the IEA.
“However, if successful by the end of the
decade, the expected decline in Mexican crude
production will push the country closer to
becoming a net crude importer and tighten
supplies of heavy sour crude for US Gulf
Coast refineries.”
The IEA’s expectations that Mexico is to
transition from oil exporter to potential
importer represents one of the most
significant changes in global petroleum
markets to 2030, with the implication of such
a scenario potentially reaching Latin America
and North America, their trade flows and
their crude quality balances.
Front page picture: Pemex’s Dos Bocas
refinery
Picture source: Mexico’s Secretaria de
Energia
Crude Oil01-Jul-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Between now and the end of
this decade, the global oil market will undergo
its most dramatic change yet with demand
forecast to fall on transport electrification
and supply expected to continue to rise,
especially in the Americas, the International
Energy Agency (IEA) said this week.
In its Oil 2025 report, the IEA said demand
growth will be just 2.5 million barrels/day
from 2024 to 2030, before plateauing at around
105.5 million barrels/day by the end of this
decade.
The US will remain the world’s top producer at
over 20 million barrels/day, but its prowess in
fossil fuels production may be forced to face
other realities.
China’s push for transport electrification will
continue apace, and globally electric vehicles
(EVs) will account for 20% of all sales in
2025: 20 million EVs out of world sales of 100
million vehicles, said the IEA.
Amid this shift, the petrochemicals sector will
remain the source for demand growth in crude
amid urbanization in the emerging economies and
growing demand for polymers and other
chemical-derived materials.
However, the IEA warned that slowing demand for
crude from the transport sector will challenge
refineries built with the current dominance of
transport fuels in mind, and this could result
in closures.
A DIFFERENT PICTURE IN FIVE
YEARSThe IEA noted that an
extraordinary boom in US production accounted
for 90% of the increase in global supply
between 2015-2024, as shale lifted US oil
production by more than 8 million barrels/day
to over 20 million barrels/day.
At the same time, oil demand in China increased
by almost 6 million barrels/day and accounted
for 60% of the global increase in oil use.
“The picture to 2030 looks very different.
Following an extraordinary surge in EV sales,
the continued deployment of trucks running on
liquified natural gas (LNG), as well as strong
growth in the country’s high-speed rail
network, along with structural shifts in its
economy, Chinese oil demand is on track to peak
this decade,” said the IEA.
“For supply, the pace of expansion in US oil
production is slowing as oil companies scale
back investments but it nevertheless remains
the largest contributor to non-OPEC+ growth in
the forecast.”
Crude demand and production trends in the
world’s two largest economies prompted the IEA
to say that the oil markets are going through a
“fundamental transformation” as the drivers of
global oil supply and demand patterns shift.
In figures, the push for the electrification of
transport in many countries will displace 5.4
million barrels/day of global oil demand by the
end of the 2020s.
In the meantime, global oil production capacity
is forecast to rise by 5.1 million barrels/day
to 114.7 million barrels/day by 2030, led by
Saudi Arabia and the US, which will
significantly outpace projected demand
increases.
It will be this expanding capacity amid slowing
demand growth that are likely to keep crude
prices lower for longer – even forever. In the
IEA’s words, sharply higher supply than demand
suggests that “prices would have to drop to
avoid stock levels which would make the market
dysfunctional.
“If OPEC+ crude oil supply is sustained at
current rates, all else being equal, global oil
supply would rise to 107.2 million barrels/day
by 2030, 1.7 million barrels/day higher than
projected demand, suggesting prices would have
to drop to prevent an untenable stock build,”
the IEA said.
The agency also focused on natural gas liquids
(NGL), which are expected to rise sharply – by
2.3 million barrels/day by 2030 – and account
for nearly half the total increase in world oil
production capacity.
A “strategic focus” on natural gas development
by producers in the Middle East is projected to
boost regional NGL supply by 1.4 million
barrels/day to 2030.
Meanwhile, independent US producers are set to
slow spending, although increasing associated
gas from the shale patch is expected to buoy US
NGL output by 860,000 barrels/day.
Biofuel supply gains led by agricultural
powerhouses such Brazil, India and Indonesia
are forecast to add another 680,000 barrels/day
by 2030.
“Crude oil capacity is set to rise by 1.8
million barrels/day globally, led by the UAE
(up by 720,000 barrels/day) and Iraq (560,000
barrels/day), while the biggest decline comes
from Mexico. Total non-OPEC+ oil supply is
forecast to climb by 3.1 million barrels/day by
2030, despite the number of approved projects
tailing off after 2027,” said the IEA.
PETROCHEMICALS GROW – REFINERIES TO
SUFFERWhile the transport sector
is slowly expected to shy away from using
fossil fuels, petrochemicals will continue to
be the dominant source of oil demand growth
from 2026 onwards.
The IEA forecasts that the global production of
polymers and synthetic fibers will require 18.4
million barrels/day of oil by 2030, or more
than one in every six barrels.
“The refining sector is set to be increasingly
challenged by demand growth that is underpinned
almost exclusively by petrochemicals produced
from non-refined products such as NGLs. Global
refined products demand is projected to peak in
2027 at 86.3 million barrels/day, only 710,000
barrels/day above 2024 levels. Thereafter,
accelerating declines in gasoline and diesel
use outweigh growth in naphtha and jet fuel,”
said the IEA.
“Despite tepid demand growth projections, 4.2
million barrels/day of new refining capacity is
expected globally by 2030, partly offset by 1.6
million barrels/day of closures. Even so, net
capacity growth is set to far exceed refined
product demand, with increases in Asia,
especially China and India, outpacing shutdowns
in Europe and the US.
“This indicates that more capacity will have to
shut, with high-cost plants in Europe and on
the US West Coast expected to be hardest hit.”
Front page picture source: IEA
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