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Ethylene29-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US can maintain nearly all
the plastic and chemical tariffs it imposed
this year after an appeals court granted on
Thursday the government’s request to stay the
judgment of a lower court.
The stay will remain in place while the case is
under consideration by the US Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit.
Earlier,
the US lost a judgment over its tariffs in
the US Court of International Trade. That lower
court ruled that the
president exceeded its authority when
it imposed tariffs under the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). These
IEEPA tariffs included nearly all of the duties
that the US imposed in 2025 on imports of
commodity plastics and chemicals.
Had the appeals court rejected the government’s
request for a stay, then the US would have had
10 calendar days to withdraw the tariffs it
imposed under IEEPA. The tariffs covered by the
ruling include the following:
The 10% baseline tariffs against most of
the world that the US issued during its
so-called Liberation Day event on 2 April.
These include the reciprocal tariffs that were
later paused. The US issued the tariffs under
Executive Order 14257, which intended to
address the nation’s trade deficit.
The tariffs that the US initially imposed
on imports from Canada under Executive Order
14193. These were intended to address drug
smuggling. The US later limited the scope of
these tariffs to cover imported goods that do
not comply with the nations’ trade agreement,
known as the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement
(USMCA).
The tariffs that the US initially imposed
on imports from Mexico under Executive Order
14194. These were intended to address illegal
immigration and drug smuggling. Like the
Canadian tariffs, these were later limited to
cover imported goods that did not comply with
the USMCA.
The 20% tariffs that the US imposed on
imports from China under Executive Order 14195,
which was intended to address drug smuggling.
Because the appeals court granted the
government’s request for a stay, the US can
maintain the IEEPA tariffs.
The ruling
did not cover sectoral tariffs imposed on
specific products like steel, aluminium and
auto parts, and it does not cover the duties
that the US imposed on Chinese imports during
the first term of US President Donald Trump.
IMPLICATIONS OF THE
RULINGIf the ruling is upheld by
the higher courts, it could bring some imports
of plastics and chemicals back to the US while
lowering costs of other products.
While the US has large surpluses in many
plastics and chemicals, it still imports
several key commodities.
US states that border Canada import large
amounts of polyethylene (PE) and other plastics
from that country because it is closer than the
nation’s chemical hubs along the Gulf Coast.
Other significant imports include base oils,
ammonia, polyethylene terephthalate (PET),
methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI), methanol
and aromatics such as benzene, toluene and
mixed xylenes (MX).
RULING COULD REDIRECT CHINESE EXPORTS
OF PLASTIC PRODUCTSThe IEEPA
tariffs of the US caused countries to redirect
exports of plastics and chemicals to other
markets, particularly to Europe. The result
depressed prices for those plastics and
chemicals. If the ruling holds, some of those
exports could return to the US and reduce the
quantity of exports arriving in Europe.
The IEEPA tariffs had a similar effect on the
plastic products exports by China. Those
exports were redirected to other countries,
especially southeast Asia. These redirected
shipments flooded those countries with plastic
goods, displacing local products and lowering
domestic demand for the plastics used to make
those products.
If the ruling is restored by higher courts,
then it could direct many of those shipments
back to the US, although they would unlikely
affect shipments of auto parts. Those shipments
are covered by the sectoral tariffs, and the
court ruling did not void those tariffs.
RULING REMOVES BASIS FOR RETALIATORY
TARIFFS AGAINST US PLASTICS,
CHEMSChina had already imposed
blanket tariffs in retaliation to the IEEPA
tariffs the US imposed on its exports. China
unofficially granted waivers for US imports of
ethane and PE, but those for liquefied
petroleum gas (LPG) were still covered by the
duty.
China relies on such imports as feedstock for
its large fleet of propane dehydrogenation
(PDH) units, which produce on-purpose
propylene.
If upheld, the ruling could restore many of
those exports and improve propylene margins for
those PDH units.
The EU was preparing
to impose retaliatory tariffs on exports of
nearly every major commodity plastic from the
US. Other proposals would cover EU imports of
oleochemicals, tall oil, caustic soda and
surfactants from the US.
Canada also
prepared a list of retaliatory
tariffs that covered US imports of PE,
polypropylene (PP) and other plastics,
chemicals and fertilizers.
If the ruling holds, it would remove the basis
for the proposed tariffs of Canada and the EU
as well as the existing ones already imposed by
China.
RULING WOULD NOT ELIMINATE THREAT OF
FUTURE TARIFFSEven if the higher
courts uphold the ruling and bars tariffs under
IEEPA,
the US has other means to impose duties
that are outside of the bounds of the ruling.
Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974. Such
tariffs would be limited to 15%, could last for
150 days and address balance of payment
deficits. Tariffs imposed under the following
statutes would require federal investigations,
which could delay them by several months.
Section 338 of the Tariff Act of 1930. The
president can impose tariffs of up to 50%
against countries that discriminate against US
commerce.
Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, which
addresses unfair trade practices. This was the
basis on the tariffs imposed on many Chinese
imports during the peak of the trade war
between the two countries.
Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of
1962, which addresses imports with implications
for national security. Trump used this
provision to impose tariffs on steel and
aluminum.
The US has started Section 232 on the following
imports:
Pharmaceutical and active pharmaceutical
ingredient (APIs) – Section 232
Semiconductors and semiconductor
manufacturing equipment – Section 232
Medium and heavy-duty trucks, parts –
Section 232
Critical minerals – Section 232
Copper – Section 232
Timber and lumber – Section 232
Commercial aircraft and jet engines –
Section 232
Ship-to-shore cranes assembled in China or
made with parts from China – Section 301
Shipbuilding – Section 301
The case number for the appeal is 2025-1812.
The original lawsuit was filed in the US Court
of International Trade by the plaintiffs VOS
Selections, Genova Pipe, Microkits, FishUSA and
Terry Precision Cycling. The case number is
25-cv-00066.
Thumbnail Photo: A container ship, which
transports goods overseas. (Image by
Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)
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Page: US tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals
and energy
Speciality Chemicals29-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Rates for shipping containers
from Asia to the US are already facing upward
pressure amid the
90-day tariff pause, but Wednesday’s ruling by a federal
court could add fuel to the trend, according to
shipping analysts.
“The decision of the US Court of International
Trade to deem [US President Donald] Trump’s
sweeping tariffs as unlawful is good news for
shippers – but it could signal the beginning of
the next era of confusion in global supply
chains,” analysts at ocean and freight rate
analytics firm Xeneta said.
Emily Stausboll, Xeneta senior shipping
analyst, said that even if the appeal fails,
Trump will not throw in the towel, and he has
other levers to pull to achieve the same
outcome as the sweeping tariffs.
“We only have to look at the US government
proposal to introduce port fees on
China-affiliated ships and the SHIPS for
America Act to understand the range of options
at Trump’s disposal in the ongoing trade wars,”
Stausboll said.
Judah Levine, head of research at online
freight shipping marketplace and platform
provider Freightos, said the 90-day pause on
145% tariffs on Chinese goods has already
driven a sharp rebound in ocean freight demand.
“Shippers have been frontloading to beat the
August expiration,” Levine said. “This ruling
may add fuel to that trend, especially if
tariffs are actually suspended – even
temporarily.”’
Levine said that some shippers deterred by the
30% tariffs may now rush to move goods before
the appeals process concludes or new tariff
mechanisms are activated.
“That could increase container demand even
further, adding to the strength of the early
start to peak season,” Levine said.
RULING ADDS UNCERTAINTY
Lars Jensen, president of consultant Vespucci
Maritime, said the ruling by the court adds a
new level of uncertainty for US importers.
“Not only do they have to contend with the
risks associated with changing tariffs, now it
is also cast into doubt whether or not the
announced tariffs will even be implementable –
and this also raises the question whether
tariffs paid in recent weeks can ultimately be
reclaimed,” Jensen said in a post on LinkedIn.
If, after appeals, the tariffs are ultimately
found to be unlawfully implemented, shippers
should have a good case for getting the paid
tariffs back, Jensen 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.
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tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
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chemicals and energy topic page
Speciality Chemicals29-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Moody’s has cut its rating for
Sasol from stable to negative on the back of
“continued operating performance deterioration”
in the face of weak chemicals and oil markets,
the agency said on Thursday.
The firm, which assesses the creditworthiness
of company debt issuance, expects the South
Africa-based major’s adjusted debt to earnings
before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortisation (EBITDA) to grow from 2.2 times to
3.0.
“The weak performance of Sasol’s chemical
business during the last 18 months has been
characterized by falling prices, subdued
demand, and continued capacity growth,” Moody’s
said in a ratings note.
“This has resulted in high levels of asset
impairments as well as continued margin
deterioration.”
Sasol recently set out a performance programme
to improve operational performance, with its
chemicals business substantially
underperforming peers over the last few years.
“Performance over the last four years has not
lived up to our own expectations,” said Sasol
CEO Simon Baloyi, speaking earlier this month.
Earlier this year, the company booked a South
African Rand (R) 58.9 billion ($3.3 billion)
impairment on its chemicals Americas ethane
value chain as a result of softer market
conditions, as well as R5.3 billion on its
Africa polyethylene chlor-alkali and polyvinyl
chain and R7.8 billion on its Secunda, South
Africa, liquid fuels refinery.
The company has also set out plans to mothball
or close four units across its US and European
operations by the end of the calendar year
2025, due in most cases to high costs and
little expectation of a substantial market
recovery.
Moody’s projects that Sasol’s EBITDA margin
will fall to 20% in 2025 and 2026, compared to
22.5% in 2024 and 25% in 2023.
“Sustained low oil prices will result in
challenges in Sasol’s fuels business, however,
the company’s hedging program will partly
mitigate the downside risk,” Moody’s said.
Sasol had not responded to requests for comment
at the time of publication.
Thumbnai; photo: Sasol’s headquarters in
Sandton, South Africa (Source:
Shutterstock)

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Ethylene29-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–A US court ruled on Wednesday
that the president cannot impose global tariffs
under an emergency act, a judgment that would
void many of the tariffs that the nation
imposed in 2025 against nearly every country in
the world.
The administration of US President Donald Trump
filed a notice that it was appealing the
ruling.
Under the judgment issued by the US Court of
International Trade, the US has 10 calendar
days to withdraw the following tariffs:
– The 10% baseline tariffs against most of the
world that the US issued during its so-called
Liberation Day event on 2 April. These include
the reciprocal tariffs that were later paused.
The US issued the tariffs under Executive Order
14257, which intended to address the
nation’s trade deficit.
– The tariffs that the US initially imposed on
imports from Canada under Executive Order
14193. These were intended to address the flow
of illicit drugs. The US later limited the
scope of these tariffs to cover imported goods
that do not comply with the nations’ trade
agreement, known as the US-Mexico-Canada
Agreement (USMCA).
– The tariffs that the US initially imposed on
imports from Mexico under Executive Order
14194. These were intended to address the flow
of immigrants and illicit drugs. Like the
Canadian tariffs, these were later limited to
cover imported goods that did not comply with
the USMCA.
– The 20% tariffs that the US imposed on
imports from China under Executive Order 14195,
which was intended to address the flow of
illicit drugs.
The US imposed these tariffs under the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act
(IEEPA), which gives the president authority to
take actions to address a severe national
security threat.
To justify the use of the IEEPA, Trump declared
that the trade deficit, drug smuggling and
illegal immigration constituted national
emergencies.
If the ruling stands, it would remove the
tariffs that the US has imposed on many imports
of commodity plastics and chemicals.
By extension, the ruling would remove the
threat of retaliatory tariffs that other
countries could impose on the nation’s
substantial exports of polyethylene (PE),
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and other ethylene
derivatives.
The court’s order does not cover the sectoral
tariffs that the US has imposed on specific
products such as steel and aluminium.
In addition, it does not cover the Section 301
tariffs that the US imposed against Chinese
imports during Trump’s first term. These
tariffs were intended to address unfair trade
practices.
RATIONALE BEHIND THE COURT’S
JUDGMENTThe US constitution
delegates the power to impose tariffs to
congress. Although congress has delegated trade
authority to the president, it had set clear
limitations that allowed the legislature to
retain the power to impose tariffs.
The IEEPA does not delegate unbounded tariff
authority to the president, the court
said. “Any interpretation of IEEPA that
delegates unlimited tariff authority is
unconstitutional.”
The authority that congress delegated to the
president under IEEPA is limited and does not
include the power to impose any tariffs, the
court said.
COURT FINDS NO
EMERGENCYEven if the president
could impose tariffs under IEEPA, the trade
deficit does not constitute an emergency, the
court ruled. The US already has a statute to
address trade deficits under Section 122.
“Section 122 removes the president’s power to
impose remedies in response to
balance-of-payments deficits, and specifically
trade deficits, from the broader powers granted
to a president during a national emergency
under IEEPA by establishing an explicit
non-emergency statute with greater
limitations,” it said.
In addition, the court found that drug
trafficking and illegal immigration fail to
meet the emergency threshold established under
IEEPA.
To meet that threshold, the emergency must have
a substantial part of its source outside of the
US and it must pose a threat to the nation’s
national security, foreign policy or economy.
Also, the emergency must be unusual and
extraordinary. The action that the president
takes must deal directly with the threat.
The court found that the tariffs fail to
directly deal with drug trafficking and illegal
immigration. While they may provide the US with
leverage to negotiate agreements, such leverage
does not meet the threshold of addressing the
emergency at hand.
The lawsuit was filed in the US Court of
International Trade by the plaintiffs VOS
Selections, Genova Pipe, Microkits, Fishusa and
Terry Precision Cycling. The case number is
25-cv-00066.
Thumbnail shows containers, which are used
in international trade. Image by
Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock.
Visit the
ICIS Topic Page: US tariffs, policy – impact on
chemicals and energy
Polypropylene28-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Brazil’s foreign trade
committee Gecex has postponed a meeting where
it was expected to decide on imposing
antidumping duties (ADDs) polyethylene (PE)
imports from the US and Canada.
The decision has created uncertainty in the
country’s PE market, which widely expected the ADDs to be
implemented from June.
In a note on its website, Gecex stated the
“meeting will be rescheduled” but offered no
further details.
A spokesperson for Gecex said to ICIS it did
not have any further information to offer.
Gecex’s meeting this week planned to discuss
its investigation into allegations by Braskem,
Brazil’s sole PE producer, that US and Canadian
producers are exporting PE to Brazil below fair
market value.
According to market sources, Braskem had
already been communicating to customers price
increases on the back of the expected ADDs.
Earlier this week, Gecex increased ADDs
on US
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) from from 8.2% to
43.7%.
Gecex is also investigating potential
polyethylene terephthalate (PET) dumping from
Malaysia and Vietnam, following ADDs proposals
by Indorama and Alpek.
The plastics transformation sector in Brazil
said ADDs in place and those potentially
implemented in the near future increase
costs for all major thermoplastic
resins, raising input costs for manufacturers.
Meanwhile, the trade group representing
producers Abiquim said the low operating rates
across the country’s chemical plants were
partly a result of unfair global competition,
and fully
supported ADDs being imposed on US and
Canadian PE.
Front page picture: Port of Santos in Sao
Paulo, Latin America’s largest
Source: Port of Santos Authority
Clarification: Re-casts and
clarifies last paragraph
Nylon28-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–BASF will become the sole owner
of Alsachimie, taking over the shares of former
joint venture partner DOMO Chemicals, the
German major announced on Wednesday.
Currently, BASF holds 51% of the shares and is
set to buy DOMO’s 49% stake in the company
which, subject to consultations with relevant
social bodies of Alsachimie, will close by
mid-2025.
Alsachimie was founded by the two companies in
February 2020 and situated on the French-German
border, producing key materials for polyamides,
including KA-oil, adipic acid and
hexamethylenediamine adipate (AH salt).
The purchase would complement BASF’s nylon 6,6
precursor production at its site in Chalampe,
France, and enable further backward integration
into key raw materials for the value chain in
Europe.
“By taking over the shares of our partner DOMO
Chemicals, we are further strengthening our
leading position and long-term commitment to
the nylon 6,6 value chain and paving the way
for future growth with our customers in
industries such as automotive and textiles,”
said BASF board member Stephan Kothrade.
“The intended transaction aligns with our
strategy to continue to focus on delivering
tailored polyamide solutions in the core
segments automotive, consumer goods, industrial
and electrical & electronics industries,”
said DOMO Chemicals CEO Yves Bonte.
Propylene28-May-2025
BARCELONA (ICIS)–ExxonMobil is selling its
refinery at Gravenchon, France, to Canadian
refining group North Atlantic.
The two companies have entered exclusive
negotiations for North Atlantic to acquire an
82.89% controlling interest in Esso Société
Anonyme Française SA and 100% of
ExxonMobil Chemical France.
Filing of a tender offer is expected in the
first quarter of 2026 for the deal which
includes Exxon’s refinery at the Gravenchon
site, the second largest refinery in France.
The transaction will be submitted to
local trade unions in accordance with French
law.
In 2024, ExxonMobil
sold its Fos-Sur-Mer refinery near
Marseille, France, along with fuel terminals in
Toulouse and Villette.
The company also
closed its cracker and downstream
production at Gravenchon in 2024. At the
time, the company said the site had lost more
than €500 million since 2018 and despite
efforts to improve the site’s economics, it
remained uncompetitive.
According to the ICIS Supply & Demand
Database ExxonMobil still has some small
chemicals capacities at Gravenchon and nearby
Port Gerome including propylene,
polyalphaolefins and oligomers.
Local trades union, CSEC, said in a press
release that ExxonMobil would market chemicals
and specialty products on behalf of the new
owners. ExxonMobil did not reply to a request
for confirmation of this.
It also has large base oils capacities in
France including 12,000 barrels/day at Port
Jerome and 3,200 barrels/day at Gravenchon.
In a statement released on 28 May, North
Atlantic said it has the ambition to
consolidate Gravenchon as a center of French
energy and industry for decades and to grow
North Atlantic into a transatlantic energy
champion.
Located on a 1,500-acre site in the Normandy
region of France, the combined facility is one
of the largest integrated chemical complexes in
western Europe. The refinery includes two
distillation trains, several conversion units
and associated logistics facilities. The site
has the capacity to process 230,000 barrels/day
of crude oil and other feedstocks, according to
North Atlantic.
North Atlantic said it aims to develop
Gravenchon into a green energy hub to
accelerate the deployment of low-carbon fuels
and renewable power. The company said it is
committed to maintain employment and existing
compensation and benefits.
Ted Lomond, president and CEO of North Atlantic
and president of North Atlantic France said:
“This is a pivotal moment for North Atlantic as
we enhance our transatlantic presence and
commitment to energy security through
innovative energy solutions aligned with global
energy needs”.
Ajay Parmar, ICIS director of energy and
refining said: “My view is that Exxon is
choosing to sell assets where profitability has
been and likely will continue to be dented
going forward. Refinery margins in Europe have
returned back to around their pre-COVID levels
this year, after a few years of bumper profits
post-pandemic.”
He added: “These refinery assets are less
profitable and so the company is probably
looking to divest for this reason. Exxon/Esso
also sold off the Fos-Sur-Mer refinery last
year – I think the strategy is to steadily exit
these lower margin businesses.”
Photo: Part of an oil refinery complex
(Shutterstock)
Focus article by Will
Beacham
Polyvinyl Chloride28-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Brazil has approved plans to
raise antidumping duties (ADDs) on polyvinyl
chloride (PVC) imports from the US from 8.2% to
43.7%.
The decision, taken late Tuesday, implements
one of Brazil’s highest ADDs rates. The sharp
hike in duties was taken after a proposal filed
in 2024 by local polymers major Braskem and
caustic soda and chlorine derivatives producer
Unipar, Brazil’s main PVC producers.
“The proposal to increase in ADDs applied to
imports of suspension polyvinyl chloride (PVC)
resin originating in the US was granted, due to
a change in circumstances, from 8.2% to 43.7%,”
said Gecex, Brazil’s body in charge of foreign
trade.
Gecex is also investigating potential
polyethylene (PE) dumping from the US, a
proposal brought forward by Braskem, as well as
potential polyethylene terephthalate (PET)
dumping from Malaysia and Vietnam, following
proposals by Indorama and Alpek.
The plastics transformation sector in Brazil
has said ADDs in place and those potentially
implemented in the near future are
increasing costs for all major
thermoplastic resins, raising input costs for
manufacturers.
Unsurprisingly, the trade group representing
producers
Abiquim has said the fears about higher
costs due to ADDs “do not hold up” when taking
into account a beleaguered chemicals production
sector with historic low operating rates.
Polyethylene28-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Fears within the Brazilian
manufacturing sector about rising input costs
and higher inflation if antidumping duties
(ADDs) are imposed on US and Canadian
polyethylene (PE) “do not hold up” when taking
into account a beleaguered chemicals production
sector, according to trade group Abiquim.
A spokesperson for the trade group, which
largely represents the chemicals producing
side, said the low operating rates across the
country’s chemical plants were partly a result
of unfair global competition, and fully
supported ADDs being imposed on US and Canadian
PE.
Brazil’s government body for foreign trade, the
Foreign Trade Chamber (Gecex), is to meet on 29
May to take a decision on the matter. The
investigation into possible PE dumping by the
US and Canada
started in November after a proposal
by local polymers major Braskem, which has a
commanding voice in Abiquim.
“The narrative that specific anti-dumping
duties, applied to correct unfair trade
operations, could pose inflationary risks in
the plastics processing production chain and
affect production levels in the economy as a
whole, simply does not hold up, given that
Brazil is a price taker in thermoplastic resins
(i.e. it follows variations in the
international market),” said Abiquim.
“[Moreover] There is an average idle capacity
of 36% in the Brazilian chemicals sector (data
from 2024) that can be reversed with the
implementation of ADDs. Trade defence
investigations in Brazil follow a rigorous and
technical procedure, focusing on determining
dumping margins, damage to the domestic
industry and the causal link between the two.”
If those technical parameters are met, Gecex
will implement the ADDs “in the interest” of
the country, adding that the ADDs would
strictly follow World Trade Organization (WTO)
rules regarding unfair trade.
“Allowing dumping is not justified by any
reason, since it allows the distortion of
international trade rules, allowing the sale of
products often below production cost only to
aggressively capture the market,” added
Abiquim.
GROWING
PROTECTIONISMHowever, trade
groups representing import-heavy manufacturing
companies, in a country where half of chemicals
demand is covered by imports, have warned that
those ADDs and other protectionist measures
implemented by Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s
administration increase input costs and,
ultimately, inflation.
The truth is that Lula’s cabinet does listen to
industrial producers. The main constituency of
the president’s Workers’ Party (PT) is
industrial workers, and the health of
manufacturing employment is key for its
electoral prospects.
As the 2026 general election looms, those
voters may consider their support for the PT if
manufacturing, which already came late to the
post-pandemic recovery compared with other
sectors, starts faltering again in 2025.
This is precisely the argument from the other
side. Increasing costs manufacturers could
their hit their activity and ultimately
employment in manufacturing as a whole could be
negatively affected.
In a written statement to ICIS this week, Jose
Ricardo Roriz, president of the trade group
representing plastic transformers Abiplast,
reaffirmed his opposition to protectionist
measures which increase costs for importers.
But that side of the argument has so far failed
to turn its lobbying into concrete actions.
Since he took office in January 2023, Lula’s
cabinet has approved most of the protectionist
measures chemical producers demanded.
In 2023, it reintroduced
a tax break for the purchase of inputs
by chemical companies, called REIQ, which was
withdrawn by the previous center-right
administration.
In 2024, the administration
re-imposed ADDs on US-origin PP and
approved higher
import tariffs on dozens of chemicals.
Meanwhile, Gecex is investigating another
proposal to implement ADDs on polyvinyl
chloride (PVC), a proposal by Braskem and
caustic soda and chlorine derivatives producer
Unipar.
In April, Gecex also began a probe into
potential polyethylene terephthalate (PET)
dumping from Malaysia and Vietnam, a proposal
brought forward by Indorama and Alpek.
Brazil’s Congress is currently debating a bill
contemplating state subsidies or credit lines
at a favorable rate for chemicals companies,
called Presiq.
If approved, the program could be the “savior”
of struggling chemicals producers, according to
Abiquim’s director general Andre Passos in an
interview with ICIS.
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