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Speciality Chemicals08-Aug-2025
BARCELONA (ICIS)–Rising overcapacity, AI and
protectionism may drive a swift transition in
chemical production and markets over the next
5-10 years.
Commodity chemicals may be produced mainly
by large state-owned enterprises
Smaller, privately-owned companies may
switch to high value composites, specialties,
low-carbon chemicals
High-cost regions such as Europe could
protect their essential commodity chemicals
production
Protective measures need to be taken in
next 3-6 months to rescue EU commodity
chemicals
A lot more commodity capacity closures
required to keep operating rates healthy
AI will have a massive impact on chemical
companies and markets
AI will enable us to navigate and analyze
increasingly chaotic markets
AI could drive job losses, disrupt
economies
Climate change will alter seasonal and
geographic demand patterns
Electronics, property, auto markets are
depressed
Q2 chemicals results are very poor in all
regions
In this Think Tank podcast, Will
Beacham interviews John
Richardson from the ICIS market
development team, ICIS Insight Editor
Tom Brown and Paul
Hodges, chairman of New Normal
Consulting.
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.
Recycled Polyethylene Terephthalate08-Aug-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Senior Editor for Recycling Matt
Tudball discusses the latest developments in
the European recycled polyethylene
terephthalate (R-PET) market, including:
Drops in FD NWE bale, flake and food-grade
pellet prices
Eastern Europe colourless, blue flake down
UK flake rolls over while southern Europe
discussions delayed due to holidays
Crude Oil08-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–LG Chem swung to a
second-quarter net loss year on year to won (W)
112 billion ($80.8 million), amid soft demand
caused by US tariffs and Middle East
instability, the South Korean producer said on
7 August.
in Korean won (W)
billion
Q2 2025
Q2 2024
% Change
Sales
11,418
12,242
-6.7
Operating profit
477
392
21.5
EBITDA
1,715
1,549
10.7
Net income
-112
60
–
Sales in LG Chem’s petrochemicals division fell
5.7% year on year to W4.7 trillion in the
second quarter, while recording an operating
loss of W90.4 billion amid buying hesitation
and “unfavorable foreign-exchange effects”, the
company said.
“In the third quarter, the company aims to
improve profitability through the normalization
of new capacity additions for key products in
North America and Asia and ongoing
cost‑reduction initiatives,” said LG Chem in a
statement.
Overall demand is expected to remain “subdued”
in the third quarter despite US tariff
uncertainties having been resolved, as a 15%
tariff on South Korean exports takes effect.
LG Energy Solution’s Q2 operating profit turned
positive to W492 billion, driven by an improved
product mix from increased North American
production and cost reduction efforts.
LG Chem holds a controlling 81.8% stake in LG
Energy Solution, the leading car battery maker
in the country that supplies to electric
vehicle majors such as Tesla.
($1= W1,387)

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Caustic Soda07-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The 2025 Atlantic hurricane
season is likely to be above normal, but
slightly less so than its initial prediction,
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) said on Thursday in an
update to its previous forecast.
NOAA still anticipates 13-18 named storms, of
which 5-9 will become hurricanes, and 2-5 of
those will be major storms, as shown in the
following graphic.
Source: NOAA
NOAA’s forecast in May was for 13-19 named
storms, 6-10 hurricanes and 3-5 major
hurricanes. The likelihood of above-normal
activity is 50%, a 35% chance of a near-normal
season, and a 15% chance of a below-normal
season.
“As the 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season enters
its historical peak, atmospheric and oceanic
conditions continue to favor an above-normal
season as NOAA first predicted in May,” NOAA
said.
The adjustments are for the entire season,
which runs through 30 November, and include the
four named storms that have already formed.
Yesterday, researchers at Colorado State
University’s (CSU) Weather and Climate Research
department also maintained their
prediction, with slight adjustments to the
downside.
Hurricanes directly affect the chemical
industry because plants and refineries shut
down in preparation for the storms, and they
sometimes remain down because of damage.
Power outages can last for days or weeks.
Hurricanes shut down ports, railroads and
highways, which can prevent operating plants
from receiving feedstock or shipping out
products.
Most US petrochemical plants and refineries are
on the Gulf Coast states of Texas and
Louisiana, making them prone to hurricanes.
Other plants and refineries are scattered
farther east in the states of Mississippi,
Alabama, and Florida – a peninsula that is also
a hub for phosphate production and fertilizer
logistics.
There is currently one named storm in the north
Atlantic, Dexter, and two low pressure areas,
none of which are expected to make landfall.
Ethylene07-Aug-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Business sentiment in Germany’s
chemical industry “significantly deteriorated”
in July, from June, according to the latest
survey by Munich-based research group ifo on
Thursday.
The weak industrial economy was weighing on
demand for chemical products, both in Germany
and abroad, ifo said.
At the same time, the US
tariffs on chemicals and pharmaceuticals
were “significantly damaging” German companies’
US business, ifo said.
The backlog of orders in the chemical industry
is now at its lowest level since the financial
crisis in 2009, ifo said.
Meanwhile, companies were planning further job
cuts, the group said.
The ifo Business Climate Index for the chemical
industry dropped to -19.2 points in July, from
-9.5 in June.
COMPANIES LOWER SALES
OUTLOOKS
Also on Thursday, Henkel and SGL Carbon
announced that they lowered the outlooks for
2025 sales.
Henkel now expects organic sales growth of
1.0-2.0%, down from its previous outlook of
1.5-3.5% growth.
The updated outlook took into account, “the
currently foreseeable effects of the global
tariff agreements at this point in time and
broadly correlates with current market
expectations for Henkel’s business development
over the course of the year”, said CEO Carsten
Knobel.
Henkel’s 2024 sales were €21.6 billion.
SGL Carbon said that it expects full-year 2025
sales to decline by 10-15%, from 2024 sales of
€1.026 billion. SGL’s previous outlook was for
a 10% decline.
“Increasing trade barriers, especially due to
US tariff policy, are having a negative impact
on the business development of our customers
and sales markets,” SGL said.
German chemical producers’ trade group VCI
expects a 2.0% decline in the country’s
chemical production (excluding pharmaceuticals)
in 2025.
Please also visit:
US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy
Ethylene07-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US is relying increasingly
on tariffs to influence the policies of other
countries, which is injecting more uncertainty
into chemical markets.
The US is proposing tariffs of 25% on
shipments from India in response to that
country’s imports of Russian oil and
petroleum products. These could take effect
on 27 August.
The US imposed tariffs of 40% on Brazilian
imports in response to that country’s trial of
a former president and its policies on digital
speech. More tariffs could follow a section 301
investigation into Brazilian policies.
The US said Canada’s intent to recognize
Palestine as a state would make it
difficult to reach a trade deal.
POLITICAL TARIFFS INJECT MORE
UNCERTAINTYThe latest proposals
accelerate a trend that began at the start of
the year, when the US imposed tariffs on
imports from Canada, China and Mexico after
accusing them of doing too little to
control illegal immigration and drug smuggling.
The US threatened to impose tariffs of 25%
on imports from Colombia if that country did
not accept US deportations of immigrants.
The debate around a dedicated Palestinian state
and the Russian-Ukrainian war have now joined
the list of policies that will invite tariffs
from the US.
In the case of Russian oil, the US is imposing
tariffs to compel a peace agreement. India was
caught in the crossfire because it imports
crude oil from Russia.
More countries could become targets because the
US is targeting Russian exports of petroleum
products as well as crude oil. Russia is a
significant exporter of diesel and gasoil, and
Turkey, China and Brazil import large amounts
from the country,
according to the Centre for Research on Energy
and Clean Air (CREA).
It is unclear if the US will expand the tariffs
to include other major exports from Russia,
such as weapons and fertilizer.
The US threat to Canada could presage potential
tariffs on imports from other countries that
are considering Palestinian statehood.
The tariffs on Brazilian imports and the
pending section 301 investigation point to
more policies that could attract the ire of the
US. The following lists the policies the US
cited in its announcements of Brazilian tariffs
and investigations:
Regulations on digital speech that the US
considers to be censorship
Judicial trials against elected officials
that the US considers to be political
persecution
Imposing what the US described as lower
preferential tariffs on imports from “certain
globally competitive trade partners”
Failure to enforce anti-corruption and
transparency measures
Enforcement of intellectual property rights
Deforestation
TRADE UNCERTAINTY HAMMERED CHEM
EARNINGSThe problem is not the
merit of US aims but the methods it is using to
achieve those goals. Sudden changes in trade
policy make it difficult for companies to
forecast demand and trade flows.
During the recent earnings season, chemical
companies said the uncertainty surrounding US
trade policy has discouraged businesses and
consumers from making purchases and business
decisions.
Dow said that US exports of polyethylene
(PE) evaporated in April after the US announced
its reciprocal tariff rates.
Westlake,
Tronox,
LyondellBasell,
Huntsman,
Eastman and
Arkema all mentioned uncertainty
surrounding US tariffs and trade policies.
Political tariffs are injecting more
uncertainty into markets, because chemical
companies do not know which countries and which
policies will trigger tariffs from the US.
TRADE UNCERTAINTY TO
CONTINUEUS trade policy remains
in flux.
It is delaying its proposed tariffs
on Mexican imports for 90 days.
The legal basis of the most of the national
tariffs
is being challenged in court. If the US
loses the case, then it could be forced to
rescind the national tariffs that it imposed
under the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (IEEPA). These cover the
reciprocal tariffs, the immigration tariffs,
the drug-smuggling tariffs, the Russian oil
tariffs and the Brazilian tariffs.
Meanwhile, the US is continuing a separate
track of imposing tariffs on product families
under Section 232. These would prove more
durable because they are not subject to the
litigation.
These tariffs are proceeded by a lengthy
investigation, but that does not insulate the
process from surprises.
When the US announced its investigation into
copper, markets assumed that it would be
followed by tariffs on refined copper. Instead,
the US imposed 50% tariffs on imports of
semi-finished copper products and intensive
copper derivative products.
However,
the US could expand the tariffs to include
other copper products. After 30 June, the
president could consider universal tariffs on
refined copper that would start at 15% on 1
January 2027 and rise to 30% on 1 January 2028.
The following table summarizes the pending
section 232 investigations and the deadlines to
complete them.
Product
Start of investigation
Report Due
Timber, lumber
10-Mar
5-Dec
Semiconductors
1-Apr
27-Dec
Pharmaceuticals
1-Apr
27-Dec
Medium duty trucks
22-Apr
17-Jan
Heavy duty trucks
22-Apr
17-Jan
Critical minerals
22-Apr
17-Jan
Commercial aircraft
1-May
26-Jan
Jet engines
1-May
26-Jan
Polysilicon
1-Jul
28-Mar
Unmanned aircraft systems
1-Jul
28-Mar
Source: Bureau
of Industry and Security
The US has also broadened and increased tariffs
on previously completed investigations, as
shown in the following table.
Product
Tariff
Automobiles
25%
Auto parts
25%
Steel
50%
Aluminium
50%
Copper
50%
Source: President
These tariffs have exceptions based on the
country of origin and their portion of
domestically produced content.
Insight by Al Greenwood
Caustic Soda06-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Researchers at Colorado State
University’s (CSU) Weather and Climate Research
department maintained their prediction of an
above-average Atlantic hurricane season as the
tropical Atlantic has warmed faster than normal
over the past few weeks.
The CSU team’s original prediction of 17 named
storms during the Atlantic hurricane season,
which began on 1 June and runs through 30
November, has been adjusted to 16 named storms.
Of those 16 storms, researchers forecast eight
to become hurricanes and three to reach major
hurricane strength of Category 3 or higher.
The original forecast called for nine storms to
reach hurricane strength and four of those to
be Category 3 storms or higher.
The adjusted forecast includes the three storms
that have already formed: Andrea, Barry and
Chantal.
Hurricanes are rated using the Saffir-Simpson
Hurricane Wind Scale, numbered from 1 to 5,
based on a hurricane’s maximum sustained wind
speeds, with a Category 5 storm being the
strongest.
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind
Scale
Category
Wind speed
1
74-95 miles/hour
2
96-110 miles/hour
3
111-129 miles/hour
4
130-156 miles/hour
5
157+ miles/hour
“So far, the 2025 hurricane season is
exhibiting characteristics similar to 2001,
2008, 2011 and 2021,” Phil Klotzbach, a senior
research scientist in the Department of
Atmospheric Science at CSU and lead author of
the report, said. “Our analog seasons generally
had somewhat above-average Atlantic hurricane
activity.”
The team bases its forecasts on two statistical
models, as well as four models that simulate
recent history and predictions of the state of
the atmosphere during the coming hurricane
season.
CSU researchers listed the following
probabilities of major hurricanes making
landfall in 2025:
48% for the entire US coastline (average
from 1880–2020 is 43%).
25% for the US East Coast, including the
Florida peninsula (average from 1880–2020 is
21%).
31% for the Gulf Coast from the Florida
panhandle westward to Brownsville, Texas
(average from 1880–2020 is 27%).
53% for the Caribbean (average from
1880–2020 is 47%).
Hurricanes directly affect the chemical
industry because plants and refineries shut
down in preparation for the storms, and they
sometimes remain down because of damage.
Power outages can last for days or weeks.
Hurricanes shut down ports, railroads and
highways, which can prevent operating plants
from receiving feedstock or shipping out
products.
Most US petrochemical plants and refineries are
on the Gulf Coast states of Texas and
Louisiana, making them prone to hurricanes.
Other plants and refineries are scattered
farther east in the states of Mississippi,
Alabama, and Florida – a peninsula that is also
a hub for phosphate production and fertilizer
logistics.
Ethylene06-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US plans to impose an
additional tariff of 25% on shipments from
Indian in response to that country’s imports of
Russian crude oil and petroleum products, the
government said on Wednesday.
The US is considering similar tariffs on
imports from other countries that import
Russian crude oil or petroleum products.
The additional tariffs on Indian imports will
take effect on 27 August, and they would raise
the duty on Indian imports to 50%
once the earlier tariffs are included, the
government said.
The US is using the tariffs as part of a
strategy to compel Russia to reach an agreement
with Ukraine over those countries’ war between
each other. The US alleges that Indian imports
of Russian oil are undermining its diplomacy
and sustaining Russia’s war effort.
The proposed tariffs would not apply to the
sectoral tariffs that the US has imposed on
product families such as steel and aluminium
under section 232.
The US could modify the duties if India imposes
retaliatory tariffs, if India addresses US
concerns over petroleum imports or if Russia
addresses US concerns over the war.
The US made no mention of Russian shipments of
fertilizer. Such shipments are significant, and
their exclusion indicates that the US may not
target them as part of its efforts to end the
war.
In a statement, India alleged that the proposed
tariffs are unfair, unjustified and
unreasonable.
“We have already made clear our position on
these issues, including the fact that our
imports are based on market factors and done
with the overall objective of ensuring the
energy security of 1.4 billion people of
India,” the country’s Ministry of External
Affairs said in a statement. “India will take
all actions necessary to protect its national
interests.”
The following summarizes other details of the
proposed tariffs on Indian imports.
It excludes many coal-based chemicals and
some polymers listed in Annex II, which was
published in April.
It covers Russian crude oil or “petroleum
products extracted, refined or exported from
the Russian Federation, regardless of the
nationality of the entity involved in the
production or sale of such crude oil or
petroleum products”.
It covers indirect imports, which “includes
purchasing Russian Federation oil through
intermediaries or third countries where the
origin of the oil can reasonably be traced to
Russia”.
The tariffs will take place “21 days after
the date of this order, except for goods that
(1) were loaded onto a vessel at the port of
loading and in transit on the final mode of
transit prior to entry into the US before 12:01
am eastern daylight time 21 days after the date
of this order; and (2) are entered for
consumption, or withdrawn from warehouse for
consumption, before 12:01 am eastern daylight
time on 17 September 2025”.
Thumbnail image: Containers, which feature
prominently in international shipping (Image
source: Shutterstock)
Ethylene06-Aug-2025
TORONTO (ICIS)–While the US has further raised
its tariffs on goods from Canada, the
compliance rate of Canadian chemical and
plastics products with the US-Mexico-Canada
(USMCA) trade agreement is high, meaning that
those exports will be able to continue to enter
the US tariff-free.
USMCA compliance key advantage for Canada
Canadian chemical and plastics exports fall
Chemical railcar shipments steady
US President Donald Trump last week
raised the tariff rate on
non-USMCA-compliant goods imported from Canada
to 35%, from 25%, after the two countries
failed to reach a deal by the 1 August
deadline.
In order to be USMCA-compliant, goods must meet
the USMCA’s requirements for rules of origin.
The 35% tariff is separate from the US sectoral
tariffs on autos, aluminum, and steel.
David Cherniak, policy manager, business and
transportation at the Ottawa-based Chemistry
Industry Association of Canada (CIAC), told
ICIS that CIAC does not know the exact USMCA
compliance rate for the entire chemical and
plastics sector.
“However, we estimate that it is very high,
owing to the near-universal use of North
American feedstocks in high-volume chemistry
and plastic product production,” he said.
USMCA
CIAC is a strong supporter of USMCA and was
actively engaged in the Canadian federal
government’s consultation process in autumn
2024 in preparation for the agreement’s formal
review beginning in 2026, Cherniak said.
“We consistently advocate for the free and fair
trade of chemistry and plastic products, in
alignment with our industry partners in
Washington and Mexico City,” he said.
“It’s also important to emphasize that USMCA
remains legally in force until 2036, providing
a stable framework for North American trade in
our sectors,” he said.
Ideally, CIAC wants a return to the tariff-free
relationship that existed before the Trump
tariffs, Cherniak said.
“It is important for the Canadian chemistry and
plastics industry, indeed all of Canadian
manufacturing, to have clarity and certainty
when it comes to trade with this important
partner,” he said.
The US is by far the largest market for
Canada’s chemical sector, absorbing 77% of its
exports in chemicals and chemical products,
according to CIAC data.
EXPORTS FALL
Overall Canadian exports of basic and
industrial chemical, plastic and rubber
products have
fallen sharply year on year in recent
months.
However, Cherniak said the chemistry and
plastics trade is influenced by broad
macroeconomic trends, not just US tariffs.
Globally, the chemistry and resin sectors
remain in a cyclical downturn, with
interest rates still high despite easing
from recent peaks, he said.
“These pressures intensified in April and May
amid peak uncertainty in the US trade war,” he
said.
Also, declines in exports partly reflected
falling product prices and a rebalancing of
trade flows after companies “front loaded”
buying to pull ahead of announced tariffs,
Cherniak said.
Data from Canada’s federal transport ministry,
Transport Canada, showed that rail shipments in
the chemicals sector were on par with 2024, he
said, adding: “Public chemical companies also
anticipate increased North American operating
rates as the year progresses.”
As for the 2025 outlook, CIAC’s earlier
expectation of 1-4% growth in industrial
chemicals shipments (sales), and 2-4% export
growth, now seems too optimistic.
Volumes were flat or down by 1-2% for the first
seven months of 2025 as expectations for a
stronger macroeconomic environment did not
materialize, and trade uncertainty has added
pressure, Cherniak said.
Nevertheless, North America remains relatively
strong economically and Canada’s chemical
industry benefits from a feedstock cost
advantage, with the benchmark Alberta natural
gas price recently turning negative, he said.
“As trade uncertainty eases and flows
normalize, we remain confident in the outlook
for the chemistry and plastics sectors,” he
said.
“I point back to the Transport Canada data.
Through May we see that the volume of chemicals
and resins shipped on railways is flat to 2024
even though prices have fluctuated
dramatically,” he said.
Meanwhile, the prolonged business cycle
downturn, combined with ongoing tariff
uncertainty, has delayed several major
investments in the chemical industry, Cherniak
said, but added: “We anticipate a renewed
commitment to these projects as market
conditions improve in the coming months.”
ANALYSTS
Analysts at Toronto-based Royal Bank of Canada
said in a research note on Tuesday that the
average effective US tariff rate on imports
from Canada was just 2.4% in June, one of the
lowest among US trading partners.
The average US tariff rate for goods imports
from all countries was 8.9% in June, according
to the analysts’ estimates.
While the effective tariff rate on imports from
Canada would rise with the increase in the rate
on products not compliant with the USMCA to
35%, that increase applied to a “relatively
small share, we estimate around 6%” of Canadian
exports to the US that are not USMCA compliant,
they said.
If the exemption for USMCA-compliant goods
imported from Canada remains in place, Canada
would have the lowest tariff rate of any major
US trading partner, putting Canadian exporters
in a stronger relative position to compete for
US import market share than other countries,
the analysts said.
However, there are concerns that the overall US
tariff hike on all countries has been so large,
and that the uncertainties surrounding the
tariff announcements have been so high, that US
economic growth will slow, with negative
implications for close US trading partners such
as Canada, the analysts said.
They went on to point to evidence of
softening US labor markets, particularly in
the US industrial sector, where ties with the
Canadian economy are extremely close.
CANADA WORKS TOWARDS NEW
DEAL
As it currently stands, Canada is one of the
few major trading partners without a bilateral
deal with the US, and it is also one of the few
countries, along with China, to have retaliated
against the tariffs.
At the same time, however, as long as the USMCA
exemption remains in place, much of Canada’s
trade with the US is shielded from the Trump
tariffs.
Despite missing the 1 August deadline, the
Canadian government continues to work towards
an agreement with the US, with the objective of
removing or cutting tariffs.
However, Prime Minister Mark Carney has warned
Canadians to expect that even with a deal, some
of the US tariffs may remain in place.
It remains unclear whether Canada will further
raise its retaliatory tariffs, in response to
the US tariff hike to 35% from 25%.
Canada’s powerful provincial premiers
(governors) are in disagreement over the
retaliatory tariffs. Scott Moe, premier of
resource-rich Saskatchewan has called for them
to be removed, whereas the premier of Ontario,
Doug Ford, wants them to be raised.
Some commentators have said Canada should not
rush into a bilateral deal but rather wait
until
US courts have made a final decision on the
legality of Trump’s tariffs.
Only US courts could protect against Trump’s
unpredictable and politically motivated tariff
policies, they said.
Others, however, are urging the Canadian
government to make a quick bilateral deal with
the US, saying the country cannot rely on the
USMCA and Trump may revoke the exemption for
USMCA-compliant products at any time.
Please also visit:
US tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy
Thumbnail photo source: Government of
Canada
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