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Crude Oil29-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Evonik is ramping up plant
and research investments in Asia to hit their
growth targets, while mitigating direct shocks
from US tariffs by targeting “local-from-local”
production, according to Claus Rettig,
President Asia Pacific at the German-based
specialty chemicals firm.
Evonik is undergoing a significant strategic
transformation, aiming to increase its adjusted
earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and
amortization (EBITDA) by €1 billion to €2.7
billion by 2027 from €1.7 billion in 2023,
Rettig told ICIS.
€500 million will come from growth and the
other €500 million from cost efficiencies via
cost reductions among other measures, Rettig
said.
Asia has been earmarked as a region for further
investment by Evonik and one example of this is
its new
alkoxides plant on Singapore’s Jurong
Island, marking Evonik’s fifth plant in the
country.
When deciding where to build the alkoxides
plant, Rettig said Singapore made sense as a
base as Evonik already had existing
infrastructure in place on Jurong Island, which
would save costs while still allowing the
company to service customers in Indonesia and
Malaysia, who typically purchase alkoxides from
China and Saudi Arabia.
Indonesia’s growing focus on biodiesel
production also serves as an opportunity for
the company, who hopes to ramp up the plant’s
operating rate to 100% “by the end of 2026”.
As of this year, Indonesia has a B40 – 40%
blend of palm oil with diesel fuel for domestic
consumption – mandate and aims for B50 in the
coming years.
Finally, the 100,000 tonnes/year alkoxides
plant in Singapore complements Evonik’s three
plants located in Germany, Argentina and the
US, being its first “world-scale” plant of its
kind.
“With all the uncertainties [surrounding
geopolitical tensions], we want to be very
balanced in our footprint,” said Rettig.
KEY FOCUS ON ASIASales
in Asia only amounted to a quarter of Evonik’s
total as of 2024, but the company is aiming for
a third of sales to come from the region by
2032, with China making up roughly half of that
amount.
Meanwhile, Europe’s sales made up 45% of
Evonik’s total in 2024, and around 30% of sales
was from the Americas.
“I think nobody doubts Asia is and will remain
the fastest-growing region in the world in
chemicals, and that’s why we also allocate
overproportional investments into Asia [to
increase our footprint there],” said Rettig.
While China remains a key focus in Evonik’s
Asia operations, the company is also targeting
India and southeast Asia for growth.
For example, plants in India and
Japan are due to open by the end of the
year, Rettig said.
TARIFF IMPACTPlants that
mainly serve the country they are built in are
useful for Evonik in mitigating direct risks
from US tariffs, which are projected to reduce
global GDP growth in 2025 to 3.0% from 3.2% in
2024.
However, the indirect impact from geopolitical
tensions is much harder to quantify, Rettig
said.
“Its not really easy to judge at all how much
could be affected,” he said.
Regardless, Evonik will proceed with their
investments “based on fundamentals”, which
still remain whether tariffs exist or not.
“The growing population, the age of the
population, the growing middle class, these are
the fundamentals that stay in place regardless
of tariffs,” said Rettig.
Other factors such as the Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership, which
comprises Asia’s largest economies such as
China, Indonesia, Japan and South Korea, will
also be crucial for the company in the coming
years if it wishes to hit their 33% sales
target by 2032.
Thumbnail photo: Claus Rettig is also a
board member at the Singapore Economic
Development Board (EDB). Source:
Singapore EDB
Interview article by Jonathan
Yee
Ethanol28-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The new biofuel mandate
proposed by the US calls for larger amounts of
renewable fuel to be blended into gasoline and
diesel, all while penalizing companies that
import biofuels or the feedstock needed to make
them domestically.
The proposed mandate,
called the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS), will
not just increase costs in the fuel market.
Oleochemical producers rely on the same
feedstocks to make fatty acids.
The proposed penalty on imports of feedstock
will increase demand for domestically produced
material, which will raise prices for
oleochemical producers and others company that
use natural oils to produce goods.
The following table shows the proposed RFS. The
mandate volumes for each fuel is listed as
renewable identification numbers (RINs), which
is the unit of measurement used to determine
compliance with the RFS. For ethanol, 1 RIN is
equivalent to 1 gallon. For distillates, each
gallon is worth more than 1 RIN to take into
account their higher energy density.
Figures in the table are listed in billions of
RINs.
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
Cellulosic biofuel
0.84
1.09
1.38
1.30
1.36
Biomass-based diesel
4.51
4.86
5.36
7.12
7.50
Advanced biofuel
5.94
6.54
7.33
9.02
9.46
Total renewable fuel
20.94
21.54
22.33
24.02
24.46
Implied conventional biofuels
15.00
15.00
15.00
15.00
15.00
Source: Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA)
The proposed RFS will increase costs in the
following ways:
It will require more advanced biofuels to
be blended into finished fuels. Advanced
biofuels typically cost more.
It assumes that the same volume of
conventional ethanol will be added into a
shrinking domestic market for gasoline. This
will require gasoline to contain higher
concentrations of ethanol at a time when most
service stations cannot handle fuels containing
more than 10% ethanol. Companies will have to
meet the RFS mandate by purchasing more
expensive advanced biofuels biofuels such as
renewable diesel.
Imported biofuels or domestic biofuels
fuels made from imported feedstock will receive
a 50% discount towards meeting the biofuel
mandate. This proposed discount would further
increase compliance costs if refiners cannot
obtain domestic biofuels or feedstock.
Previous US policies already have raised
biofuel costs. Tariffs have increased the costs
of imported biofuels and the feedstocks needed
to make them.
In addition, US companies have fewer tax
incentives to increase biofuel capacity.
In all, the proposed RFS could increase
compliance costs by nearly $70 billion annually
in 2026 and 2027, according to studies
commissioned by the American Fuel &
Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM), a trade
group that represents refiners. That is nearly
twice as high as the previous record year for
RFS compliance.
The small refinery exemptions that the US
recently announced will do little – if anything
– to offset the costs of the proposed RFS.
Those exemptions did not lower the biofuel
mandate. Instead, they exemptions simply
reallocated the obligations from the small
refiners to larger ones.
ETHANOL HITS BLENDING
CEILINGIdeally, the fuel market
would meet mandated volumes for total renewable
fuels by blending conventional ethanol. Ethanol
is typically cheaper than advanced fuels, and
the proposed RFS assumes that this will happen.
The mandate implies that blenders will continue
adding 15 billion gal/year of conventional
ethanol in the years 2026 and 2027, a figure
unchanged from 2023-2025.
However, US gasoline demand will continue
declining, as shown in the following chart.
Figures show millions of barrels per day of
gasoline supplied to the US market.
Source: Energy Information
Administration
To meet the mandate, finished gasoline will
need to contain higher concentrations of
ethanol, and fuel stations will need to the
equipment necessary to store and distribute
those higher blends.
The problem is most fuel stations in the US can
handle gasoline with maximum ethanol blends of
10% (E10). A relatively small number of fuel
stations have the equipment and infrastructure
necessary to handle gasoline with blends of 15%
ethanol (E15) and 85% ethanol (E85), as shown
in the following table:
Total fueling stations
150,000
E15
3,000
E85
4,200
Sources:
American Petroleum Institute (API),
US Department of Energy (DoE)
The lack of fuel stations that can distribute
E15 and E85 makes it difficult to blend more
ethanol in a shrinking market for domestic
gasoline.
US forecasts for fuel consumption acknowledge
this ceiling on ethanol demand. They expect
demand to decline, as shown in the following
chart. Figures show millions of barrels/day of
ethanol consumed in the US.
Source: EIA
Once the gasoline pool hits that ceiling for
ethanol blending, blenders will have to meet
the RFS mandate buy obtaining more expensive
advanced biofuels such as biodiesel, renewable
diesel, sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) and
cellulosic fuels.
In particular, renewable diesel and SAF have no
blending limits, so the fuel market would face
no physical constraints in using these fuels
instead of conventional ethanol to meet their
RFS mandates.
However, the AFPM wars that such a strategy
could prove way more costly than using
conventional ethanol. It accounts for half of
the $70 billion in annual compliance
costs, according to the AFPM studies.
IMPORTED BIOFUELS TO BECOME TWICE AS
EXPENSIVEUnder the proposed RFS,
imports of biofuels and domestic biofuels made
from imported feedstock will receive a 50%
discount towards meeting the biofuels mandate.
In other words, it will be twice as expensive
to rely on imported biofuels or feedstock to
meet the proposed RFS mandates.
The discount on imported feedstock will have
more widespread effects because the biofuel
industry is just one of many sectors that use
natural oils.
Oleochemical producers and other oil-dependent
industries also rely on natural oils, so they
will be competing with renewable fuels
producers for limited quantities of domestic
feedstock.
The effects of this feedstock displacement
would be amplified if biofuel producers replace
imports of used cooking oil with domestic oils.
Most of this used cooking oil is used to make
biofuels,
according to the business intelligence and
analytical firm GlobalData.
Moreover, the US imports significant amounts of
used cooking oil, as shown in the following
chart. Figures are in kilograms and reflect
2024 imports for consumption under the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) code 15180040.
Source: US
International Trade Commission (figures in
kilograms)
US TARIFFS INCREASE COMPLIANCE COSTS
FOR DIESEL-TYPE BIOFUELSEven
without the RFS, compliance costs will likely
increase because of tariffs, which the US has
imposed on some of its largest suppliers of
feedstock used to make biofuels.
In 2024, China was the largest US supplier of
imports of used cooking oil, Brazil was the
largest for tallow and Argentina for refined
soybean oil.
The following chart shows the US 2024 trade
balance for tallow (HTS code 150210) and
refined soybean oil (HTS code 150710). Figures
are in kilograms, and they show imports for
consumption and domestic exports for 2024.
Source: ITC
The US could conceivably replace these imports
with domestically produced soybean oil, but it
will need to increase production and install
crushing capacity to provide enough feedstock
to offset the imports.
It will also present logistic challenges, since
supply chains would need to be re-arranged to
accommodate the new sources of feedstock.
If the new supply chains require domestic
shipping, then the Jones Act could further
increase costs because it requires shipping
between US ports to be conducted by ships
built, flagged, owned and crewed domestically.
US TAX CODE PROVIDES FEWER INCENTIVES
FOR RENEWABLE FUELSThe US tax
code is reducing its incentives for biofuel
production, which will make it more expensive
for companies to increase production to meet
the larger mandate in the proposed RFS.
The biodiesel blender tax credit expired at
the end of 2024. It provided a $1 tax incentive
for each gallon of pure biodiesel or renewable
diesel blended into petroleum-based diesel.
By contrast, the section 45Z Clean Fuel
Production Credit (CFPC) provides a 35 cent/gal
benefit for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) and
20 cents/gal for all other fuel. The credit
rises to $1.75/gal for SAF and $1.00/gal for
all others for producers that meet prevailing
wage and apprenticeship requirements. However,
feedstocks must be sourced from the US, Canada
or Mexico.
HOW THE RFS WORKSThe RFS
requires that a mandated volume of biofuel is
added to the nation’s fuel pool. The RFS
distinguishes among the different types of
biofuels by their feedstock, the process used
to produce them and their effect on greenhouse
gas emissions. The following table summarizes
the different classes of biofuels.
Code
Content
Greenhouse Gas Reduction
Renewable Fuel
D-6
Any biomass, including corn starch
At least 20% versus petroleum
Advanced Biofuels
D-5
Any renewable biomass except
corn-starch-based ethanol
At least 50% versus petroleum
Biomass-based Diesel
D-4
Biodiesel, renewable diesel
At least 50% versus diesel
Cellulosic biofuel
D-3, D-7
Made from cellulose, hemicellulose or
lignin
At least 60% versus petroleum
Source: EPA
Insight article by Al
Greenwood
Thumbnail shows corn, which can be used to
make ethanol. Image by
Shutterstock.
Crude Oil28-Aug-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Evonik is spinning out its
infrastructure activities in Marl and Wesseling
chemicals parks to become new companies, the
German firm said on Thursday in a statement.
The newly minted SYNEQT will begin operations
on 1 January 2026, initially as a wholly owned
subsidiary of Evonik, but could become open to
investors “taking different stakes to provide
further funds to grow the business”, the
company said.
SYNEQT will comprise 3,500 employees (3,000 in
Marl, 500 in Wesseling) and will have an
estimated revenue of €1.8bn, based on 2024
annual results.
“So far, we at Evonik have largely combined
everything under one roof,” said Thomas Wessel,
chief human resources officer and labor
director at Evonik, responsible for the
company’s infrastructure units.
“In a world in which more and more specialist
knowledge is needed to assert oneself at the
top in the respective field, a different setup
is needed.”
The move will combine two of Evonik’s
infrastructure sites at the Rhine and Ruhr
rivers to become one of the largest service
providers for the process industry in the North
Rhine-Westphalia region.
The medium-sized firm will build on experience
in all services related to chemical plants and
other process industries, with expertise
including:
Energy supply
Pipeline construction and operation
Safe facility and plant management
Technical services
Waste disposal
Port operations
Plant logistics and fire brigades
Plant security and canteen operations
“At SYNEQT, we have combined all the
qualifications and fundamentals to be able to
develop the sites in the long term into
climate-neutral, digitally networked and highly
flexible industrial ecosystems with modular,
tailor-made assets, closed material cycles and
smart services,” said SYNEQT management
spokesman Thomas Basten.
Wessel cautioned that the move would take time,
and while terms of employment for those
affected would not generally change, SYNEQT
employees would not be exempt from
Evonik’s long-term efficiency measures.
Evonik was both the operator and largest
customer of the Marl and Wesseling chemical
parks, but is now shifting its focus to its
core chemicals production business, and the
decision to siphon off its services activities
was set in motion about two years ago.
SYNEQT’s business assets provide customized
services to around two dozen companies – with
nearly 20 based in Marl, and a further five
located in Wesseling – currently as part of
Evonik.
Both Marl and Wesseling already operate an
industrial hydrogen network and are connected
to raw material and energy pipelines, which
SYNEQT intends to leverage towards
climate-neutral, economically sustainable
operations.
Headquartered in Marl, the management of SYNEQT
is made up of Thomas Basten (spokesman), Daniel
Brünink and Andreas Orwat. The name stands for
SYNergies, paired
with Energy, Quality
and Technical Expertise.
Around 10,000 staff work at the Marl Chemical
Park across approximately 900 buildings and 100
production facilities.
A further 1,500 employees from 10 plants
operate from the Wesseling Chemical Park, where
Evonik produces silica and precursors for
animal feed additives.
Thumbnail image shows Evonik headquarters
in Essen. Credit: Shutterstock

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Ethanol27-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–US railroads BNSF and CSX are
offering several new intermodal services
designed to offer seamless, efficient
connections from coast to coast, an alliance
that is supported by the head of the chemical
distributors association.
“It’s kind of like an alliance that you see in
shipping,” Eric Byer, president and CEO of the
Alliance for Chemical Distribution (ACD) told
ICIS. “I think it is a brilliant idea that all
the railroads should look at.”
One new service will connect southern
California, home to the major container import
ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, to
Charlotte, North Carolina and Jacksonville,
Florida.
Another will connect Phoenix, Arizona and
Atlanta, Georgia, designed to shift
over-the-road (OTR) volumes from truck to rail.
A new service will also connect the Port of New
York and New Jersey to Norfolk, Virginia, and
Kansas City, Missouri.
Between Phoenix and Flagstaff, Arizona, two new
10,000-foot sidings will further support this
growing market by enabling more efficient
meet/pass operations on the route connecting to
BNSF’s Southern Transcon.
“This collaboration between BNSF and CSX
demonstrates the power of partnership,
delivering greater flexibility, efficiency and
value for our customers,” BNSF Group Vice
President of Consumer Products Jon Gabriel
said.
The agreement comes after two other Class 1
railroads – Union Pacific (UP) and Norfolk
Southern (NS) – agreed to merge in a deal that
they said enhances competition and creates a
more reliable and efficient transcontinental
service option.
Byer said the alliance shows him that the
merger was not necessary and that something
like this is likely better for ACD membership.
“I think it will be a better value for our
members because the alliance is using the
existing system to keep customers happy,” Byer
said. “You don’t have to do a merger where it
is going to cost a ton of money.”
Byer said he hopes the Surface Transportation
Board (STB), the agency charged with approving
the UP-NS merger, will look at this alliance as
a clear alternative.
“I think it is a much better route,” Byer said.
In the US, chemical rail car loadings represent
about 20% of chemical transportation by
tonnage, with trucks, barges and pipelines
carrying the rest.
Chemicals are generally shipped in tank cars
(liquids and liquefied gases), hopper cars (dry
commodities); and some boxcars (dry bulk or
packaged chemical products).
In Canada, producers rely on rail to ship
more than 70% of their products, with some
exclusively using rail.
Thumbnail image shows a railroad track.
Photo by Shutterstock
Caustic Soda27-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Evonik has opened a 100,000
tonne/year alkoxides plant on Singapore’s
Jurong Island, the largest of its kind in
southeast Asia, the German specialty chemicals
producer said on Wednesday.
First
announced in 2023, the “mid double-digit
million euro investment” facility will meet
demand for alkoxides in Asia, Evonik said in a
statement.
Demand for biodiesels is growing, particularly
in southeast Asian countries such as Indonesia,
Malaysia and Thailand, said Evonik Asia Pacific
president Claus Rettig.
“By producing closer to our customers, we
enhance supply security and agility, while also
contributing to Singapore’s vision for a
sustainable chemical industry,” said Lauren
Kjeldsen, chief operating officer Custom
Solutions at Evonik.
“We are glad that partners like Evonik have
given us your vote of confidence by investing
in Jurong Island to scale production of
specialty chemicals that will serve growing
regional and global demand,” Singapore’s
minister for sustainability and the
environment, Grace Fu, said at the plant’s
launch on Wednesday.
Besides the new Singapore plant, Evonik also
has alkoxide plants in Germany, Argentina and
the US.
Alkoxides, or sodium methylates, are primarily
used for biodiesel production and can also be
used in chemical recycling.
Speciality Chemicals26-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Ocean carriers have announced
rate increases for shipping containers on the
Asia-US trade lane, but industry analysts
expect rates to continue facing downward
pressure amid soft demand and the lack of a
peak season.
Lars Jensen, president of consultant Vespucci
Maritime, said the rate hike announcements have
been a monthly occurrence without much success.
“Carriers have announced rate increases of
$1,000-3,000/FEU (40-foot equivalent unit) from
1 September on the Pacific, but they have also
done so basically every fortnight for the past
couple of months without any success, leading
to rates which are now becoming unsustainably
low,” Jensen said.
Jensen noted that the announcement on Friday by
US President Donald Trump of a major
investigation on furniture entering the country
could prop up demand.
“Furniture coming from other Countries into the
United States will be Tariffed at a Rate yet to
be determined,” Trump said in a post on his
social media platform Truth Social.
Jensen said the two HS codes 9403 and 9401,
covering furniture and parts as well as seats
and furniture, accounted for 800,000 TEU of
imports equal to some 6.9% of total US imports
in the second quarter of this year.
“A sharp ramp-up in tariffs could therefore
have a material impact on container demand,”
Jensen said. “It should be noted that there was
a strong year-on-year increase in furniture
imports early in 2025 and hence importers
appear to have frontloaded cargo prior to such
tariffs.”
NO PEAK SEASON IN 2025
Even as carriers announce general rate
increases (GRIs) for September, shippers need
not worry about peak season surcharges,
according to an analyst at ocean and freight
rate analytics firm Xeneta.
Peter Sand, chief analyst at Xeneta, said the
continuing trend for increasing capacity on
fronthaul trades and subdued ocean container
shipping demand will contribute to spot rates
falling further in the coming weeks.
“Shippers should not fear peak season
surcharges because, quite simply, there is no
traditional peak season in 2025,” Sand said.
Sand said average spot rates to the US East
Coast are now at the lowest level since the end
of 2023.
“The rate of decline may have slowed from the
dramatic drops in July, but this gradual
erosion will continue because there is still
room for spot rates to fall further,” Sand
said.
The low spot rates will also impact
negotiations for long-term contracts going
forward, Sand said.
“Shippers looking to sign new long-term
contracts have much to consider because they
must balance where rates are right now, where
they are likely to be in 2026, and how much of
an impact the ongoing conflict in the Red Sea
conflict should have on the rates they are
paying on each trade,” 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
Speciality Chemicals26-Aug-2025
BARCELONA (ICIS)–Chemical companies may see
drastic AI-driven changes in sales, marketing,
supply chain and product development but it
will always augment, not replace humans.
Companies need to work out their pain
points and ambition
Quantifying AI’s business value is a key
challenge
Companies often run siloed projects without
a unified strategy
Clean, trusted data is essential for AI
success
AI should augment, not replace, human
decision-making
Governance and ethical frameworks are
critical safeguards
AI can reshape supply chains and customer
engagement
Cultural change and workforce education are
vital
AI raises questions about intellectual
property
AI adoption in chemicals is still at an
early stage
In this ICIS Think Tank podcast, Will
Beacham interviews AI entrepreneur and
consultant Eleanor Manley,
Sebastian Rau, director of
advanced analytics for ICIS and Carlos
Soares, senior vice president for
data, analytics & AI at Brenntag.
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.
Ammonia26-Aug-2025
Denmark sees full biomethane reliance this
summer
Scaled-up biomethane output bolstered
security of supply during crisis
Energinet working with Germany to reach
agreement on technical specifications
BUCHAREST (ICIS)–Denmark is planning to scale
up its biomethane production amid a greater
push to phase out fossil gas domestically and
ramp up exports to Europe.
In an interview with ICIS, three experts at the
Danish gas and electricity grid operator
Energinet, confirmed the country had reached
several days of full reliance on biomethane
this and last summer.
The trend is likely to increase as Denmark
intends to expand annual production – currently
hovering above 8TWh – by another 25% in the
next two years and fully replace fossil gas
with renewable gas by the beginning of the next
decade.
‘If you have a vision for 35 billion cubic
meters (bcm)/year for biomethane in the EU,
then you also need some scale,’ said
Jeppe Bjerg, lead development manager.
‘You need to produce where resources are
abundant and it’s a cost-effective solution.
You cannot rely just on a 10 to 20-year time
horizon; you need a market that is stable,’ he
explained.
SECURITY OF SUPPLY
Denmark is a leader in biomethane output,
holding top spot along with the UK, France and
Germany among the largest producers in the EU.
The push towards full fossil phaseout and
replacement with renewable gases mirrors the
EU’s commitments, but Bjerg said that the
expansion of biomethane production has also
brought security of supply dividends.
“When we had the energy crisis in 2022, we
started to see that biomethane production was
making a real contribution to security of
supply. It helped us. It’s not normally how we
look at security of supply but when you produce
20% of your physical demand [of biomethane] you
begin to see it,” Bjerg said.
“We were laughing when its share was 0.5%
initially but it has reached sufficient levels
to shield us from the crisis,” he added.
Bjerg believes that the key to Denmark’s
biomethane production growth lies in a
combination of running a well-developed
agricultural sector and logistical chain,
transparency, an outward looking attitude and,
critically, generous subsidies similar to those
forked out to the heating sector.
Thanks to all these factors, Denmark has seen
significant growth.
Since 2013, when the sector was established,
Denmark saw the establishment of 60 plants
which are currently working at full capacity.
Some of them have attracted large investor
interest, such as Shell’s, which spent close to
€2bn in 2022 to snap up plants and
associated infrastructure.
Bjerg admitted that demand has been decreasing
amid the expansion of electrification but said
that export requirements will keep the sector
viable in the longer term.
GUARANTEES OF ORIGIN
The success of exports depends on two factors,
Energinet experts said.
Firstly, Denmark is one of the EU’s front
runners in trading guarantees of origin and
linking up with the bloc’s Union Database for
Fuels, a system tracking the production of
liquid and gaseous fuels to ensure compliance
with renewable energy targets.
UDB is expected to be operational from next
year and allow countries in the EU and
immediate neighbourhood, such as Ukraine, to
engage in cross-border trading.
Data by the Danish Biogas Association show that
more than 60% of local guarantees of origin for
Danish-produced biogas were traded in Sweden
and Germany. The remaining 20% were distributed
in other EU countries and only 13% of Danish
GOs were traded locally.
The cost of GOs’ is becoming increasingly
affordable, hovering at an average €15.00/MWh,
a major decrease from €50-€60/MWh at the start
of the industry, Bjerg said.
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
Secondly, Rasmus Neergaard Jacobsen,
Energinet’s chief commercial manager and senior
economist Lasse Ellebaek Krogh said the EU’s
expansion of biomethane production will depend
on harmonising technical specifications.
Neergaard Jacobsen said Energinet and local
distribution system operators had a very
‘embracing’ attitude from the start, trying to
tackle operational challenges.
“We do not establish compressor stations all
over the place only where we can’t deal with
challenges,” he added.
Jacobsen said that one of the reasons Energinet
was able to connect so many plants to the grid
in Denmark was because the operator decided to
increase the oxygen specification to 0.5% which
was technically possible at a large scale at
the time.
“A lot of the new plants are able to work at
lower level at 0.1 or 0.2% and today the gas we
can export to Poland is at 0.2%,” he added.
Ellebaek Krogh said exports to Germany are
difficult because the locally accepted oxygen
specification is 0.001%.
He said Energinet was in talks with the
distribution system operator in
Schleswig-Holstein, northern Germany, to
establish a biomethane zone.
“We can export the amount that they consume in
that particular area and ensure that high
oxygen levels do not impact them,” he said.
The alternative would be to find a solution on
the Danish side of the border that would still
facilitate the exports to Germany.
ICIS has expanded its coverage of the
emerging biomethane market via the development
of the topic page “European biomethane: data,
news and analysis”. Click here to
access
Ethanol26-Aug-2025
MUMBAI (ICIS)–State-owned Bharat Petroleum
Corp Ltd (BPCL) has begun land acquisition and
pre-project activities for its 9 million
tonne/year greenfield refinery and
petrochemical complex near Ramayapatnam port in
the southeastern Andhra Pradesh state, company
chairman Sanjay Khanna said.
“This strategic investment will further expand
BPCL’s petrochemical portfolio, provide a
natural hedge against petroleum products in the
long run, and align with India’s vision of
becoming a global refining and petrochemical
hub,” Khanna said during the company’s annual
general meeting on 25 August.
BPCL
expects to invest rupee (Rs) 61 billion
($695.3 million) to set up the refinery
project.
The project will have an ethylene production
capacity of 1.5 million tonnes/year is expected
to have a petrochemical intensity index (PI) of
35%. PII is a measure of the percentage of
crude oil that will be converted into
chemicals.
Once operational, BPCL plans to market around
80% of the new refinery’s products domestically
to downstream producers and automobile
manufactures in southern India.
The new refinery is part of BPCL’s plan to
invest Rs1.7 trillion over the next five years
to grow its refining and fuel marketing
business, as well as expand its petrochemicals
and green energy businesses.
Project
Location
Details
Andhra Pradesh refinery and petrochemical
complex
Nellore, Andhra Pradesh
Land acquisition, feasibility studies
ongoing
Bina Refinery Expansion Project
Bina, Madhya Pradesh
Includes refinery expansion and
petrochemical projects. Commissioning by
May 2028
Kochi Polypropylene Project
Kochi, Kerala
Expected to become operational by
December 2027
Mumbai Refinery Upgradation Project
Mumbai, Maharashtra
Replacement of CCU & FCCU with PRFCC.
Completion by May 2029
Bargarh ethanol project
Bargarh, Odisha
Ethanol plant to begin operations in
September 2025
The company’s planned petrochemical expansions
include the petrochemical projects at its
Bina refinery in the central Madhya Pradesh
state, and the
Kochi refinery in the southern Kerala
state.
The Bina refinery project is a brownfield
expansion that will raise the refinery’s
capacity by 41% to 11m tonnes/year, to cater to
the requirements of upcoming petrochemical
plants, which include a 1.2 million tonnes/year
ethylene cracker and downstream units.
The site is expected to produce 1.15 million
tonne/year of polyethylene (PE) including high
density PE (HDPE) and linear low density PE
(LLDPE) and 550,000 tonne/year of polypropylene
(PP) and other chemicals like benzene, toluene,
xylene and others.
The Bina refinery project is on track for
completion by May 2028 while the 400,000
tonne/year PP project at Kochi is expected to
begin operations by December 2027, as per the
annual report.
BPCL is also investing Rs142 billion to upgrade
its Mumbai refinery by replacing the catalytic
cracking unit (CCU) and fluidized catalytic
cracking unit (FCCU) with a petro resid
fluidized catalytic cracking unit (PRFCCU),
company chairman Sanjay Khanna said. The
company expects to complete the upgrade by May
2029.
Separately, the company expects to begin
operations at its 200 kilolitre/day ethanol
plant at Bargarh in the eastern Odisha state by
September 2025.
The ethanol plant is currently in
pre-commissioning stage and once operational,
the integrated refinery is expected to produce
both first generation (1G) as well as second
generation (2G) ethanol using rice grain and
paddy straw as feedstock.
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