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Plastics and Resins19-Nov-2024
CARTAGENA, Colombia (ICIS)–Latin America
stands at a crucial turning point as global
economic and political dynamics shift, with
significant opportunities in energy, food
security and technological advancement, an
economist said on Tuesday.
Martin Redrado, director at the Buenos
Aires-based Fundacion Capital, said Latin
America is uniquely positioned to benefit from
changing global trade patterns, particularly as
the world moves from a rules-based system to a
more transactional approach.
The economist was speaking to delegates at the
annual meeting of the Latin American
Petrochemical and Chemical Association (APLA).
Mexico has emerged as a primary beneficiary of
nearshoring initiatives, while South American
nations including Colombia, Brazil, Argentina
and Chile are increasingly attracting
international attention.
The region’s energy sector is projected to play
a vital role in global security, with forecasts
indicating Latin America will produce 11
million barrels of oil daily by 2030,
representing 25% of global production, said
Redrado.
Brazil is expected to double its offshore
pre-salt oil production, while Argentina’s Vaca
Muerta development promises significant gas
production potential.
The economist said regarding food security,
Latin America’s position appeared equally
strong, with the region already controlling
half of global corn exports and 60% of soybean
exports, with Brazil leading as a major meat
exporter.
“Latin American will have a central role to
play in food security. Today the world has 8
billion inhabitants, and it is estimated that
by 2030 around 2.3 billion of those 8 billion
will become middle class,” said Redrado.
“The middle class consumes more protein, and
clearly Latin American, with half of the total
corn exports in the world and 60% of soybean
exports, is well placed to cater for that
demand.”
Technological integration, particularly
artificial intelligence, is reshaping
traditional industries, said Redrado, noting AI
applications in agricultural soil analysis,
weather forecasting, and pest control are
enhancing productivity.
Similar advances, he concluded are being made
in energy sector efficiency and construction
monitoring.
INFRASTRUCTURE STILL
BEHINDHowever, infrastructure
remains a significant challenge, and Redrado
said Latin America must improve both physical
and digital connectivity, including enhanced
petrochemical infrastructure and better
regional integration.
The push for private sector participation in
infrastructure development is growing, with
negotiations ongoing for increased US
involvement under the Trump administration.
Summing up, Redrado said that as global
tensions persist in Europe and the Middle East,
Latin America’s relative stability and
strategic distance from these conflicts,
combined with existing free trade agreements
with the US, position the region favorably for
sustainable economic growth and development.
The 44th APLA annual meeting takes
place 18-21 November in Cartagena, Colombia.
Gas19-Nov-2024
LONDON (ICIS)–On November 15, OMV Gas
Marketing and Trading said Russia’s Gazprom
Export would cut supplies following a decision
by the Austrian company to stop
payments.
Despite the announcement, gas continues to
flow, sparking questions over what lies behind
the supply cut announcement and new
arrangement.
In this brief Q&A, ICIS responds to
questions based on information cross-checked
with multiple sources in Ukraine, Slovakia and
Austria.
1. Why did Gazprom Export cut
contractual gas supplies to Austria’s
OMV?
Under Russian legislation, exports of natural
gas are subject to a 30% duty, in fact
shouldered by European off-takers.
Sources familiar with Gazprom’s long-term EU
contracts say the producer is prohibited from
paying the levy itself.
This means that if an importer halts payments,
Gazprom Export is obliged to stop supplies.
OMV Gas Marketing and Trading announced on 13
November that it would stop payments for
Russian gas exports to recover €230m in
compensation awarded by an arbitral tribunal.
The award is to cover non-delivered gas in
2022.
That resulted in Russia stopping delivering gas
under the long-term contract with OMV.
2. Russian gas is still flowing to
Austria. How come?
Although OMV said on November 15 that Gazprom
Export would reduce gas deliveries to zero from
the following day, flows transiting Ukraine and
Slovakia and delivered into Austria have
continued as normal.
Data published by regional grid operators
indicate that gas is also exported on to
neighboring Italy and the Czech Republic,
although it is unclear whether the volumes are
of Russian origin.
Data verified by ICIS with multiple Ukrainian,
Slovak and Austrian sources show that Gazprom
Export continues to transit the gas via
Slovakia up to the Austrian border.
From there it is reportedly transferred to a
western European counterparty which has a
transport contract with transmission operator
Gas Connect Austria.
This explains why there have only been minor
changes in nominations on the Ukrainian-Slovak
and Slovak-Austrian borders.
Considering the minor impact on flows and even
price spreads, many market sources interviewed
by ICIS have raised questions over whether this
transfer had been pre-arranged.
Neither OMV nor Gazprom responded to questions
from ICIS.
3. How long is this arrangement going
to last?
Possibly until January 1, 2025 when Ukraine’s
current transit agreement with Russia expires.
4. Are there other companies involved
in this arrangement?
This is unlikely.
Slovak-importer SPP also has an import contract
for Russian gas.
Sources in the country say most of the volumes
are transited by Gazprom and offtaken by the
buyer on the local virtual trading point,
however.
5. Has anything changed in relation to
the transit agreement in Ukraine and
Slovakia?
No. Ukrainian sources confirm there were no
changes in the transit and transfer
arrangement.
Slovak sources close to grid-operator Eustream
say Gazprom continues to hold long-term
transmission capacity at the Velke Kapusany
border point with Ukraine.
Gazprom’s booked entry capacity at Velke
Kapusany amounts to 141,500,000 cubic meters
(at 20°C).
Exit capacity at Baumgarten on the
Slovak-Austrian border stands at 138,500,000.
Gazprom has booked transit capacity via
Slovakia until 2028.
6. Following this latest transfer, has
anything changed in OMV’s long-term import
agreement with Gazprom?
Based on public statements, all we know for now
is that OMV is no longer off-taking gas under
its long-term agreement with Russia.
It is possible that following the arbitration
award and OMV’s subsequent refusal to pay for
supplies, Gazprom would not resume contractual
deliveries under the terms of the agreement.
This is due to expire in 2040.
Events could also lead to the renegotiation of
the contract, with OMV likely looking to
shorten the duration of the deal and reduce
imports.
OMV is under pressure by the Austrian
government as well as the EU to reduce its
dependence on Russian gas and has taken steps
to secure Norwegian pipeline gas and LNG.
Speciality Chemicals19-Nov-2024
BARCELONA (ICIS)–European chemical producers
may have to keep paying high energy prices as
geopolitical instability impacts sentiment more
than the fundamentals of supply and demand.
Europe spot electricity prices up 76% this
year, ICIS TTF gas price up 40%
Fear drives markets more than fundamentals
which remain bearish
Demand is reduced compared to five-year
average, supply plentiful
Above average temperatures forecast into
December in Europe
Gas storage around 90%, well above 5-year
average
New sources of US, Qatari liquefied natural
gas (LNG) due onstream in 2025
Renewable energy will ramp up quickly in
Europe
Donald Trump may increase LNG supply by
unfreezing projects
In this Think Tank podcast, Will
Beacham interviews ICIS gas and
cross-commodity expert, Aura
Sabadus, 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.
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Ammonia18-Nov-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Although some locations still
have some final acreage remaining, the latest
US Department of Agriculture (USDA) weekly crop
progress report is reflecting a completion of
corn and soybean harvesting for 2024.
While a final yield tally will not be
immediately available, it has been discussed
within agriculture and fertilizer segments as
having been a more productive year – especially
for corn – than was anticipated given the
extremely hot and very dry conditions present
this summer.
For fertilizers, there is optimism remaining
that over the next few weeks, winter will not
quickly settle in and that weather conditions
will be beneficial enough to see post-harvest
applications gain more momentum.
One product that is expected to see an uptick
as long as there is no further rainfall is
ammonia, with wet fields having been an issue
for undertaking these end-of-the-year inputs
through the first half of November in some
states.
The USDA did report there is now 77% of the
cotton crop complete with the sorghum harvest
having reached 95%.
The next significant crop will be winter wheat,
which the weekly update showed is now 94%
planted with 84% having emerged. There is 49%
of the crop rated as being in good to excellent
condition.
Plastics and Resins18-Nov-2024
CARTAGENA, Colombia (ICIS)–Latin American
chemicals producers should be prepared to face
a prolonged downturn which could extend to 2030
as newer capacities globally keep coming
online, according to the director general at
the Latin American Petrochemical and Chemical
Association (APLA).
Manuel Diaz said global manufacturing is not
recovering at the speed the chemicals industry
would need for supply and demand to rebalance
anytime soon, and Latin America – the
quintessential ‘price taker’ region as its
trade deficit makes it dependent on imports
from other regions – must prepare for the most
prolonged downturn in chemicals in living
memory.
Diaz spoke to ICIS ahead of the APLA annual
meeting which kicked off on Monday.
“This is pretty much what we are going to be
talking about in the 2024 annual meeting:
oversupply of products and raw materials, of
ethylene. There are still many plants being
announced, so it seems that at least until
2027, I would say 2030, the pressure on
profitability is going to be very strong,” said
Diaz.
“Companies in Latin America should be prepared
because, while new plants are still being
started up, there is no sign of a world
recovery strong enough to get there. A silver
lining could be found in the fact that there is
still considerable population growth: from now
until 2050, we will have a growth in the world
population like what would be, so to speak,
adding a new India [the most populous country
with 1.45 billion people].”
Diaz, an Argentinian national, said he expects
more plants will shut down in his home country
as the national chemicals industry adapts to a
more liberalized market under Javier Milei’s
administration.
In October, US chemicals major Dow said it
would stop
producing polyether polyols at its site in
San Lorenzo, in Argentina’s province of Santa
Fe, on the back of poor economics caused by
global oversupply, while Argentina’s
Petroquimica Rio Tercero shut
its toluene diisocyanate (TDI) plant in
Cordoba arguing the same reason.
“I think we will see a reorganization in the
sector, especially in Argentina. There will be
some plants that are no longer sufficiently
attractive from a profitable or product point
of view – there will be a trend to concentrate
on more profitable products,” said Diaz.
“In the case of Dow, for instance, the plant
they shut in Argentina was not the only plant
of that type that it shuts down globally, that
is why I think this is not a problem only in
Argentina or Brazil – it is a global problem, a
problem of competitiveness.”
Diaz said we must think about China’s
“differently” in order to understand the
current downcycle, much of it related to that
country’s overcapacities as its economy is not
growing at the expected, pre-pandemic-like
rates.
“From our place in the world, we see everything
as an economic curve and a capital curve, but
the Chinese sees it from the point of view of a
work curve. So, it is not a case that they are
subsidizing the product itself for an easier
sale,” said Diaz.
“What they are doing, in my opinion, is
subsidizing companies so job creation does not
slow down – economic growth there is the
priority.”
He went on to reflect on how the globalization
rates up to 2020 may have gone too far, adding
the pandemic showed us how it was a mistake to
focus on just a few countries – or just China,
in many cases – as the main source for
manufactured goods.
– So, is the world coming back to a
protectionist wave, like that of the 1930s?
– “Now we see countries around the world
thinking about how to protect their
manufacturing sectors from China’s
oversupplies, so maybe that globalizing cycle
[up to 2020] has ended, the trend of setting up
plants in the cheapest place and so on. I think
the pandemic left us messages,” said Diaz.
“Messages around the fact that we can’t have a
dependency on a single place from where all the
electronic chips come from, for instance. So, I
think it’s not going to be just Brazil [where
protectionist
measures are enacted] but in many other
Latin American countries – it is a contingency
measure.”
Finally, about the potential the new US
administration under Donald Trump may impose
import tariffs on Mexico, Diaz said “reality
may end up surpassing” ideology, referring to
the high dependance US manufacturers also have
from Mexico’s manufacturers.
The two countries’ economies became highly
linked from the 1990s, when the first North
American free trade deal, NAFTA, was signed.
The situation did not change much after the
first Donald Trump administration renegotiated
NAFTA to give way to the current USMCA trade
deal.
“We have two new administrations in the US and
Mexico. We will see what they end up doing, but
what is clear is that there will be
alternatives [to import tariffs being imposed].
Trump also knows that US companies buy a lot
from Mexico, and in a protectionist spiral
Mexico could also impose tariffs, so US
companies would end up being affected as well,”
said Diaz.
“That is the reality that applies to
everything, and that is why I say that reality
normally surpasses your ideological vision: One
thing is what I can say in the campaign, a
different one may be what you implemented once
you are in office.”
Thumbnail shows money from Latin America.
Image by ICIS.
The 44th APLA annual meeting takes
place 18-21 November in Cartagena, Colombia.
Interview article by Jonathan
Lopez
Speciality Chemicals18-Nov-2024
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Here are some of the stories
from ICIS Latin America for the week ended on
16 November.
NEWS
Brazil to investigate
alleged US, Canada PE
dumpingBrazil is to start an
investigation into polyethylene (PE) arriving
on its shores from the US and Canada and
whether the material constituted dumping, the
government said.
Unipar sees light at
tunnel end as prices rise, Argentina
revivesManagement at
Brazil’s chloralkali chain producer Unipar this
week held onto improved financial results in
Q3, quarter on quarter, to assert the industry
may be finally going through the beginning of
the end of the downturn.
Mexico confident US will
realize tariff-free trade benefits both –
SheinbaumRenegotiation in
2026 will be key for Mexico to show the US how
the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement
(USMCA) is equally beneficial for both
countries, the Mexican president said this
week.
Pemex
targets petrochemicals, fertilizers expansion,
$2.4-billion savings in
2025Pemex is to overhaul its
La Cangrejera and Morelos petrochemicals
complex in Mexico’s southern state of Veracruz
to sharply increase production, the state-owned
energy major said this week.
INSIGHT: Mexico’s
manufacturers hopeful USMCA renegotiation could
spare them from
tariffsPolicymakers and
companies in Mexico are coming to terms with a
potential shift in trade policies in the US
after Donald Trump’s decisive victory in the
presidential election last week.
Mexico in strong position
to renegotiate USMCA, tariff panic premature –
Braskem Idesa execA
potential US import tariff of 10% on Mexican
goods is looming large on the country’s export
and petrochemicals-intensive manufacturing
sectors, but it is early days and the worries
are premature, according to the head of
institutional relations at polyethylene (PE)
producer Braskem Idesa.
Brazil’s Petrobras begins
commercial operations at gas processing unit in
RioPetrobras has begun
commercial operations at its Natural Gas
Processing Unit (UPGN) at the Boaventura Energy
Complex in Itaboraí, Rio de Janeiro state, the
Brazilian state-owned energy major said on
Monday.
PRICING
LatAm
PP domestic, international prices stable on
sufficient supply, soft
demandDomestic and
international polypropylene (PP) prices were
assessed unchanged this week across Latin
American countries.
LatAm
PE domestic prices steady to lower on weak
demand, sufficient
supplyDomestic polyethylene
(PE) prices were assessed as steady to lower
across Latin American (LatAm) countries while
international prices were unchanged this week.
Ethylene18-Nov-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 15 November.
Trump to bring limited tariffs; higher
growth, rates – economists
Under US President Donald Trump, US chemical
companies will unlikely see the full-blown
tariffs that he has proposed during his
campaign, but they will operate under a faster
growing economy with higher inflation and
interest rates that will settle at an elevated
rate, economists at Oxford Economics said on
Monday.
INSIGHT: Mexico’s manufacturers hopeful
USMCA renegotiation could spare them from
tariffs
Policymakers and companies in Mexico are coming
to terms with a potential shift in trade
policies in the US after Donald Trump’s
decisive victory in the presidential election
last week.
Canada ports prepare to resume
operations, but timeline still
unclear
The Port of Vancouver and other Canadian West
Coast ports as well as the Port of Montreal
were preparing on Wednesday to resume
operations, but the exact timeline remains
unclear, officials said in updates.
US exporters should book cargoes 4-6
weeks in advance; ILA-USMX talks break
down
US exporters are being urged to book outgoing
shipments four to six weeks in advance as US
and Canadian port labor issues are ongoing and
could coincide with the pre-Lunar New Year peak
season on the Asia-to-US trade route.
Brazil to investigate alleged US,
Canada PE dumping
Brazil is to start an investigation into
polyethylene (PE) arriving on its shores from
the US and Canada and whether the material
constituted dumping, the government said.
Canada Port of Montreal to resume
operations on Saturday
The Port of Montreal will resume operations on
Saturday, 16 November, at 07:00 local time,
following labor disruptions that started on 31
October and a subsequent lockout of
about 1,200 dock workers.
Petrochemicals18-Nov-2024
LONDON (ICIS)–Click here to
see the latest blog post on Chemicals & The
Economy by Paul Hodges, which looks at the
likely impact of Trump’s tariffs on the
smartphone market.
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. Paul Hodges is the chairman of
consultants New
Normal Consulting.
Speciality Chemicals18-Nov-2024
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top stories
from ICIS Europe for the week ended 15
November.
Europe PET hit by
multiple factors pulling market in different
directions
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) sources in
Europe are faced with a plethora of
circumstances trying to shape the market, which
in the end may result in a degree of stability.
Crude markets face substantial 2025 surplus as
China demand falters – IEA
Global crude supply growth is likely to
outstrip demand by over a million barrels/day
in 2025, the International Energy Agency (IEA)
said on Thursday, with the “marked” slowdown in
China consumption the main drag on consumption
this year.
INSIGHT: European cracker shutdowns could open
market to US ethylene exports
European ethylene producers could be planning
more cracker shutdowns, with the lost capacity
being replaced by imports from the US.
Shell wins appeal in Dutch emissions
caseThe Netherlands court ruling mandating
that Shell cut its total carbon emissions by
45% by 2030 has been thrown out, the oil and
gas major said on Tuesday.
Europe PE, PP adapt value proposition in face
of evolving market
European polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene
(PP) are evolving as the world they occupy
steadily changes.
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