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Methanol21-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Indonesia’s fledgling Butonas
Petrochemical is preparing a 1 million
tonnes/year methanol plant in Bojonegoro, East
Java, to fill the country’s domestic demand and
national energy goals from 2029, according to
the company’s president Ignatius Tallulembang.
Plant will run on natural gas and carbon
dioxide feedstocks
Methanol demand is expected to surge as
Indonesia scales up its renewable fuel programs
Butonas also planning to build a bioethanol
plant
The methanol plant is designated as one of 77
national strategic projects for the 2025-2029
period, as outlined by Indonesian President
Prabowo Subianto.
Indonesia consumes around 2.35 million
tonnes/year of methanol, with domestic supply
from Kaltim Methanol Industri (KMI) limited to
around 680,000 tonnes, leaving an import gap of
1.75 million tonnes that the methanol facility
in Bojonegoro is designed to help close,
Tallulembang told ICIS.
Butonas Petrochemical was founded in 2021 to
aid in Indonesia’s evolving energy and
environmental challenges through “bold,
scalable solutions” and leading the country’s
transition to low carbon energy, according to
Tallulembang.
PLANT COMMISSIONING IN
2029
Butonas aims to commission the plant in 2029 to
coincide with the full implementation of B40
and B50 biodiesel blending mandates that
require fatty acid methyl ester (FAME)
production.
“Methanol is a key component in biodiesel
synthesis, and demand is expected to rise
sharply as Indonesia scales up its renewable
fuel programs,” said Tallulembang.
The B40 biodiesel mandate, which contains 40%
palm oil, aims to increase domestic energy
security, reduce fossil fuel imports, and
support the palm oil industry.
Butonas has selected French gas firm Air
Liquide as its technology provider, and the
steam methane reforming (SMR) design is
“optimized for scalability, energy integration,
and environmental performance”, said
Tallulembang.
The 130-hectare plant will run on 90 million
cubic feet of treated natural gas and 24
million cubic feet of carbon dioxide, sourced
directly from the nearby JTB Gas Processing
Facility operated by Pertamina EP Cepu,
Tallulembang said.
Negotiations for the Gas Sales Agreement (GSA)
with the gas operator are well advanced, with
signing targeted in the fourth quarter of 2025,
Tallulembang confirmed.
The co-utilization of vented carbon dioxide
will help lower emissions while enhancing
methanol yield, aligning with global low-carbon
standards, he said.
A date has not been set for plant construction
to begin currently, with land acquisition still
in the works.
STRATEGIC SHIFTS
POSSIBLEIn the face of domestic
and international competition faced by
Indonesia’s evolving biofuel and petrochemical
sectors, Butonas says it is focused on building
a platform for “long-term value creation” to
meet Indonesia’s methanol needs and reduce its
reliance on imports.
The plant, once running, can save the
Indonesian government an estimated 5 million
tonnes/year of diesel, or 38 billion barrels,
and replace them with FAME, saving money via
foreign currency exchange as well, Tallulembang
said.
Although the plant will primarily supply the
domestic market initially, operations are being
structured to allow for regional exports if
market dynamics shift, Tallulembang said.
“That optionality is key to navigating future
volatility,” added Tallulembang.
The process design selected for the plant is
also tied to “scalability, energy integration
and environmental performance”.
“That gives us a cost and compliance edge as
regulations tighten and carbon pricing
mechanisms evolve,” Tallulembang said.
Butonas is also planning to build a bioethanol
plant alongside the methanol plant to support
Indonesia’s clean energy transition, but it is
currently in “early development” and has been
placed on the back burner as the methanol plant
takes priority.
Tallulembang said the bioethanol plant remains
an important part of Butonas’ long-term
strategy.
“By reducing import dependency and supporting
clean fuel programs, we’re contributing
directly to Indonesia’s energy security,
current account improvement, and long-term
sustainability goals.”
Thumbnail photo shows Ignatius
Tallulembang, the President of Butonas
Petrochemical Indonesia (Source: Butonas)
Interview article by Jonathan
Yee
Crude Oil20-Aug-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–UK inflation increased in July
to its highest level in 18 months, according to
official data on Wednesday.
The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rose by 3.8% in
the 12 months to July, up from 3.6% in June.
The increase was mainly driven by transport,
particularly air fares, the Office for National
Statistics (ONS) said in a statement.
Monthly inflation has generally trended up over
the past year, with the July 2025 figure the
highest recorded since January 2024, when the
rate was 4.0%.
This current rate is way above the Bank of
England’s target of close to but not exceeding
2%.
At its latest meeting, the bank’s monetary
policy committee
cut interest rates as it tries to balance
a sluggish economy against rising
inflation.
Crude Oil20-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Malaysia’s overall
exports in July jumped by 6.8% year on
year, due to front-loaded shipments before
the US’ reciprocal tariffs took effect on 7
August.
The export growth reversed two months of
contraction and was primarily driven by a 22.5%
year on year jump in electrical &
electronic (E&E) exports, preliminary
official data showed on 19 August.
Total imports in July grew 0.6% year on year,
resulting in a trade surplus of ringgit (M$)
14.98 billion ($3.54 billion).
July exports to the US grew 3.8% year on year
to M$18.47 billion amid higher exports of
E&E products, manufactures of metal and
rubber products.
Exports to other major trading partners such as
mainland China (6.8% year on year), Singapore
(22.2%) and Taiwan (46.6%) also grew in July
amid front-loading of shipments.
Chemical and chemical product exports shrank
10.7% year on year in July.
Although Malaysia’s prospects were boosted by
the US reducing ‘reciprocal’ tariffs to 19%
from 25% previously, its trade outlook is still
subject to downside risks for the rest of the
year, said Singapore-based UOB Global Economics
& Markets Research in a note on 19 August.
Uncertainty persists regarding US-China trade
talks after reciprocal tariffs were further
suspended to 10 November, and the effect of 19%
tariffs will be reflected starting this month,
UOB said.
In light of these downside risks, the bank kept
its 2025 full-year export growth forecast at
3.8% tentatively, down from the country’s 5.8%
shipment growth in 2024.
Visit US tariffs, policy – impact on
chemicals and energy
($1 = M$4.23)

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Ethylene20-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Japan’s chemical exports fell
by 7.3% year on year to yen (Y) 961 billion in
July, weighing on overall shipments abroad
which declined for the third straight month,
official data showed on Wednesday.
Exports of organic chemicals fell by 19.4% year
on year to Y149.3 billion in July, while
shipments of plastic materials dipped by 2.3%
to Y296.8 billion, according to data published
by the Ministry of Finance.
By volume, exports of plastic materials fell by
4.0% year on year to 452,847 tonnes in August.
Japan’s overall exports fell by 2.6% year on
year to Y9.36 trillion in July, while imports
were 7.5% lower at Y9.48 trillion.
This resulted in a trade deficit of around Y118
billion last month.
Japanese exports of automobiles and motor
vehicle parts to the US plunged 27.1% and
17.4%, respectively, in July after Washington
imposed a 10% baseline tariff in April on top
of a separate 25% duty on cars.
A 15% reciprocal tariff on Japanese imports as
well as automobiles and auto parts took effect
on 7 August following a trade deal reached
between Tokyo and Washington in July.
Elsewhere, Japan’s exports to China fell by
3.5% year on year in July, continuing the
losing streak for the fifth straight month,
while those to the EU slipped 3.4% and those to
southeast Asia were down by 2.9%.
Japan’s economy
grew at a faster-than-expected annualized rate
of 1.0% in the second quarter, driven by
robust exports that weathered trade tensions
with the US, according to preliminary
government data released last week.
Polyethylene19-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Click here to
see the latest blog post on Asian Chemical
Connections by John Richardson.
Is AI a new dawn for humanity, or a bubble
waiting to burst? Is the trade war a mere
inconvenience, or a threat to global stability?
In a world filled with contradictory “facts”
and endless noise, analysts can no longer rely
on single forecasts. This is especially true in
our post-Chemicals Supercycle world, where
complexity is the only certainty.
This is why I believe in scenario planning—it’s
the only sensible approach.
My latest analysis explores three potential
futures for the US and global economies over
the next three years, shaped by the interplay
of AI innovation and trade policy, with a focus
of course on the petrochemical implications.
Best-Case: Pragmatism
PrevailsTrade normalises, AI focuses
on practical applications. Petrochemical
markets see booming demand and stability,
speeding up rebalancing and reducing the need
for extensive plant closures.
Medium-Case: The Divided
EconomyPersistent trade friction
meets continued AI hype. Petrochemicals see
trade routes shift and demand growth slow,
requiring more extensive capacity closures.
Worst-Case: Political
ParalysisA catastrophic double
shock: a trade war that chokes off supply
chains and an “AI winter” that bursts the
tech bubble. Petrochemical markets face
fragmentation and a deep contraction, forcing
massive capacity shutdowns.
Understanding these divergent outcomes is
critical for strategic decision-making.
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.
Ethylene18-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US government has slowed
down the introduction of new regulations and
provided the chemical industry with some
significant policy wins, although fostering
rail competition had some setbacks.
CHEMS GET BREAK FROM NEW
REGULATIONSThe administration
of President Donald Trump has introduced a
policy that is requiring federal agencies to
purge 10 regulations if they want to adopt a
new one.
The new policy is discouraging federal
agencies from introducing new regulations,
said Eric Byer, president and CEO of the
Alliance for Chemical Distribution (ACD).
“They know if they issue regulations, they
have to find 10 they have to whack.”
The federal government is also focused on
purging regulations that are duplicative or
unnecessary, Byer said. Many agencies that
are key for chemical regulations are pursuing
this, including the Department of
Transportation (DoT), the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA), the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Notably, the EPA embarked on a widespread
review of regulations that directly affect
the chemical industry.
Plants that rely on ethylene oxide (EO) to
sterilize medical equipment
no longer need to comply with the EO
provision in the National Emission Standards
for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP).
The EPA also allowed several chemical plants
to be excluded from the Hazardous Organic
NESHAP (HON) rule. Many of them produce
commodity plastics and petrochemicals, as
shown
here.
Recently, the House Appropriations Committee
of the House of Representatives have included
language in an appropriations bill
that will prohibit funding the Integrated
Risk Information System (IRIS) of the EPA,
according to the ACC.
The IRIS program has led to what the ACC
describes as overly restrictive regulations
governing formaldehyde, EO, hexavalent
chromium and inorganic arsenic.
A bill introduced in Congress would
permanently prohibit the use of IRIS
assessments in federal rulemaking.
ACC GOALS FOR
TSCAThe
ACC is targeting provisions in nation’s
safety program that are causing the EPA to
miss deadlines to approve new chemicals for
commercial use and that is making reviews for
existing chemicals more cumbersome.
The program is known as the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA).
For new chemicals, the ACC wants the New
Chemical Framework Rule to be rescinded
because it fixes none of the problems that is
causing the EPA to consistently miss its
90-day deadline to complete reviews for new
chemicals.
For existing chemicals, the ACC flagged the
Risk Evaluation Framework Rule, which, among
other things, assumed that employees were not
properly using personal protective equipment
(PPE) when handling chemicals.
SETBACK FOR US RAIL
COMPETITIONAn appeals court
had recently suspended the nation’s
reciprocal switching program and sent it back
for review to the Surface Transportation
Board (STB), the nation’s main railroad
regulator.
The chemical industry has supported
reciprocal switching and argued that it would
open rail carriers to more competition and
improve service. Under
reciprocal switching, one railroad
carrier handles a customer’s cargo on behalf
of another railroad carrier.
The STB finalized a rule in mid-2024 that was
intended to make reciprocal switching easier
to request when rail service was proven to be
inadequate.
The new rule was challenged by railroad
companies, and the metrics used to measure
inadequate service
failed to pass muster before the US Court
of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.
A better approach could be focusing on
competition instead of service, said Jeff
Sloan, senior director of regulatory affairs
for the ACC. The STB can make service or
competition the rationale for granting
reciprocal switching. Competition may not
face the same restrictions that left the
current rule vulnerable to lawsuits.
Moreover, the administration of US President
Donald Trump has placed a priority on
fostering competition, Sloan said.
REPORTED RAIL MERGERS WOULD ERODE
COMPETITIONCompetition could
erode further if the
rail industry further consolidates as
reported by the media.
The Wall Street Journal reported that
Union Pacific is in preliminary talks to
acquire Norfolk Southern.
Reuters reported on 22 July that
BNSF Railway hired Goldman Sachs as a banker
while CSX is seeking a banker. Warren Buffet,
chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, which owns
BNSF, later denied BNSF
is working with Goldman to acquire a
competitor, in an interview with CNBC.
Those companies make up four of the six Class
I freight railroads in North America. If
those mergers took place, they would reduce
the number to four.
“These mergers end up costing time and money
for our businesses on the shipper side,” Byer
said.
The recent merger between Canada Pacific (CP)
and Kansas City Southern has already
compromised service, according to a 17 June
letter from the chairman of the STB.
Customers are suffering from delays, missed
switches and congestion as part of the
merger’s technology changeover, according to
the letter.
CHEMS MAY GET ANOTHER CHANCE TO
REPEAL SUPERFUND TAXThe
chemical industry with another opportunity to
repeal the Superfund tax if the House of
Representatives considers another tax bill in
the autumn, Byer said.
The tax imposed duties on several
building-block chemicals and their
derivatives. The chemical industry has
advocated for the removal of the tax, and the
tax bill offered it one of its best chances
to get it repealed.
The chemical industry’s last opportunity to
repeal the tax was in the
tax bill passed earlier in 2025. It made
many favorable provisions of 2017’s Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act (TCJA) permanent. However, it
did not repeal the Superfund tax, since
legislators did not want to overburden the
bill with too many provisions.
Other opportunities could be an omnibus bill
in the autumn or another tax bill in the
spring, Byer said.
US HAS OPENING TO REVISIT CHEMS
ANTITERRORISM PROGRAMThere are
tentative signs that the US could have a
chance to revive its national
chemical-site antiterrorism program,
known as the Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism
Standards (CFATS).
The program
lapsed two years ago, leaving the
chemical industry without a national
anti-terrorism program at a time of
heightened geopolitical risk.
A new representative, Andrew Garbarino
(Republican-New York) was chosen as the next
chairman of the House Committee on Homeland
Security.
The new chairman could create an opening to
reconsider reviving the CFATS program.
Additional reporting by Joseph
Chang
Insight article by Al
Greenwood
Thumbnail shows US Congress. Image by
Lucky-photographer
Ethylene18-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 15 August.
Oil falls ahead of US-Russia talks as
China tariffs deadline
looms
Oil prices on Monday extended the steep
losses seen last week, as upcoming talks
between the US and Russia on 15 August raised
the prospect of a ceasefire pact with Ukraine
and an increase in global supply.
Brazil’s Unipar cushioned from US
tariffs but end markets feeling the heat –
CEO
Unipar faces minimal direct exposure to US
tariffs but is suffering indirect effects as
global supply chains are hit by trade
tensions creating high levels of uncertainty,
the CEO at the Brazilian chloralkali and
vinyls producer said.
China, US agree to suspend reciprocal
tariffs until 10 Nov
China and the US have agreed to suspend
tariffs on each other’s goods for an
additional 90 days to 10 November, following
US President Donald Trump’s executive order
signed on 11 August.
US Celanese expects continued soft
demand from most end
markets
Celanese will continue to focus on self-help
measures in the second half of the year amid
continued soft demand across most end
markets, the US-based acetyls and engineered
materials producer said on Tuesday.
Higher OPEC+ supply to fuel global
crude market imbalance –
IEA
The supply-demand imbalance in global crude
markets is set to increase sharply as
producing cartel OPEC+ unwinds output cuts
from September while new sanctions on the
third and fifth-largest producers hit those
countries’ supply, the International Energy
Agency (IEA) said on Wednesday.
Brazil launches R30 billion
‘Sovereign Brazil Plan’ to counter US
tariffs
Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
signed late on Wednesday a provisional
measure with support measures for Brazilian
exporters facing US tariffs totaling
Brazilian reais (R) 30 billion ($5.5
billion).
INSIGHT: US tariff policy,
uncertainty to continue hitting chemical
distributors
US tariff policy will continue to negatively
impact US chemical distributors, adding costs
and complexity that will especially hit
smaller and medium-size businesses, said the
head of the Alliance for Chemical
Distribution (ACD) and panelists at
the 2025 ChemEdge conference in
Louisville, Kentucky.
ACD to fight ‘like crazy’ against
Union Pacific/Norfolk Southern mega rail
merger – CEO
The Alliance for Chemical Distribution (ACD)
will fight “like crazy” against the proposed
mega merger between US rail giants Union
Pacific and Norfolk Southern in what could
become the first US transcontinental
railroad, said the CEO of the ACD.
Speciality Chemicals18-Aug-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended
15 August.
INSIGHT: M&A, AI may drive transformation
in high-cost regions
With Europe and other high-cost regions
suffering from a prolonged period of low
profitability, poor demand and intense
competition from new mainly China-based
capacities, the industry has entered a
painful period of readjustment.
OUTLOOK: Europe acetic acid, VAM to face
ongoing weak demand, lengthy supply despite
low domestic rates
The European acetic acid and vinyl acetate
monomer (VAM) markets are likely to face
continued muted demand through the second
half of the year, with lengthy supply unless
there are significant unplanned outages.
Higher OPEC+ supply to fuel global crude
market imbalance – IEA
The supply-demand imbalance in global crude
markets is set to increase sharply as
producing cartel OPEC+ unwinds output cuts
from September while new sanctions on the
third and fifth-largest producers hit those
countries’ supply, the International Energy
Agency (IEA) said.
OUTLOOK: Europe BD demand stable-to-low,
cracker closures will crimp CC4 supply longer
term
The European butadiene (BD) market started
2025 off with a fairly positive outlook but
the second quarter was clouded by an
uncertain US trade policy, impacting demand
and pressuring prices globally.
OUTLOOK: Weak demand, long supply to weigh on
Europe nylon market in H2 2025
Europe nylon 6 and nylon 6,6 markets face
persistent low demand in the second half of
2025, on top of the seasonal dip in the
immediate short term.
Crude Oil18-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Singapore’s petrochemical
exports fell by 23.4% year on year to Singapore
dollar (S$) 1.05 billion in July, while overall
non-oil domestic exports (NODX) contracted
more than expected as US tariffs weighed on
sentiment ahead of their implementation in
August.
Singapore’s NODX fell by 4.6% year on year in
July, swinging from the revised 12.9% rise in
June, according to
Enterprise Singapore data on Monday.
Exports of non-electronic products such as
pharmaceuticals and petrochemicals declined
6.6% year on year as volatility in
pharmaceuticals weighed, which on its own, fell
18.9% year on year.
NODX to the US contracted 42.7% year on year in
July primarily due to a 93.5% decrease in
pharmaceutical shipping.
Singapore’s non-oil exports to China and
Indonesia also fell in July, although NODX to
the EU, Taiwan, South Korea and Hong Kong grew.
Singapore is a leading petrochemical
manufacturer and exporter in southeast Asia,
with more than 100 international chemical
companies, including ExxonMobil and Aster
Chemicals & Energy, based at its Jurong
Island hub.
Amid US tariffs on most of its trading partners
taking effect on 7 August and stronger than
expected economic performances, Singapore
upgraded its 2025 GDP growth forecast to
1.5-2.5% from 0-2% previously on 12 August.
At the same time, the government expects
significant uncertainty in the second half of
2025 as front-loading of exports moderates and
geopolitical tensions remain.
US President Donald Trump is meeting Ukraine
President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday,
following talks with Russian President Vladimir
Putin last Friday, to discuss a peace deal for
the Ukraine-Russia war, but much remains up in
the air as to how this will be achieved.
US trade talks with China and India, two of the
world’s largest economies, are also ongoing,
and whether there will be a deal will determine
much on how the economy will shape up in the
coming years.
Meanwhile, trading partners are still awaiting
US executive orders to lower agreed tariffs on
commodities such as automotives and steel,
which remain at a hefty 25% and 50%,
respectively, despite deals being struck to
reduce them in July.
Singapore, too, is looking out for exemption or
concessions given for the potential higher
tariffs on semiconductors and pharmaceuticals,
according to OCBC Global Markets Research in a
note on 12 August.
“We tip full-year 2025 NODX growth should stage
a recovery towards the 2% year on year handle
this year given the healthy 1H25 performance,
up from the tepid 0.2% year on year growth last
year,” OCBC said.
Focus article by Jonathan
Yee
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