BLOG: China’s demographic crisis: Implications for polymers demand

John Richardson

30-Aug-2024

SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Click here to see the latest blog post on Asian Chemical Connections by John Richardson.

Chemical companies, as my ICIS colleague Kevin Swift and I write in today’s blog, need “to write their own story”.

This can only come from a much more rigorous approach to scenario planning from the C-Suite level down that needs to then permeate to every decision at every level of an organisation, from long-term investment planning right down to even month-by-month pricing and production- volume decisions.

And key to building proper scenarios, now that the Chemicals Supercycle, is understanding demographics as demographics are chemicals demand destiny.

Chemicals demand is of course the number of people multiplied by per capita consumption. Because of the increasing uncertainty about the rate at which most of the world’s population is going to age and shrink, one set of scenarios on future population levels makes no sense at all.

Front and centre of the global demographics crisis is China given that in 2024, ICIS expects China to drive 40% of the world’s polymers demand from just 18% of the global population.

There is a huge variance in estimates of China’s population decline that you simply must factor in. For example, China’s population may decline to 767 million by 2100 or just 373 million!

Kevin’s scenario modelling on China’s demographics and its polymers demand is an important starting point for your boardroom discussions:

  • Under the ICIS Base Case, major resins demand rises from 103.1 million tonnes in 2020 and starts to mature in the 2030s, reaching 188.6 million tonnes in 2050. After 2050, a falling population and evolving market/economic dynamics adversely affect demand, which falls to 89.3 million tonnes in 2100. This is a level consistent with pre-2020 demand.
  • With a more pessimistic outlook on population and reduced economic dynamism under the Dire Demographics scenario, major resins demand rises from 103.1 million tonnes in 2020 and starts to mature in the 2030s, reaching 116.2 million tonnes in 2050.
  • With a falling population and adverse economic dynamics, demand falls to 38.7 million tonnes in 2100, a level consistent with pre-2010 demand.

Equally important is consideration of what these demand outcomes could mean for China’s polymers trade flows:

  • The Base Case suggests China remains a net importer of major resins, but its net import position falls from 27.4 million tonnes in 2020 to 4.7 million tonnes in 2050. We only focus on the period to 2050.
  • Under the Dire Demographics scenario, production is more than sufficient and by early-2030s China attains self-sufficiency in these resins and emerges as a net exporter of 3.6 million tonnes in 2035, 7.1 million tonnes in 2040, 9.7 million tonnes in 2045 and 11.6 million tonnes in 2050.

Please write your own story by conducting the right kind of planning for a far more nuanced and uncertain chemicals world.

Editor’s note: This blog post is an opinion piece. The views expressed are those of the author, and do not necessarily represent those of ICIS.

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