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Gas21-May-2025
Additional reporting by Andreas
Schroeder, Eduardo Escajadillo and Ghassan
Zumot
CCS could prove a game-changer for
Germany’s long-term energy vision
Easing of debt brake could stimulate demand
in new sectors
Debate around resurrecting Nord Stream may
be unhelpful now
LONDON (ICIS)–Germany’s long-term energy
policies are likely to witness critical
adjustments as the new government will be
looking to strike a balance between climate
action, security of supply and economic
competitiveness.
Speaking to ICIS, Timm Kehler, CEO of Zukunft
Gas, Germany’s foremost gas advocacy group,
said the new administration remains committed
to the country’s 2045 climate neutrality target
but the means to achieve the goals are likely
to undergo a sea-change.
The new government has already announced its
decision to lift a long-standing opposition to
nuclear production, which is set to ensure the
technology is treated on a par with renewable
energy in EU legislation.
Another game-changer might be the approval of
carbon capture storage which would allow
Germany to carry out plans to import gas and
build gas-fired power plants while being able
to transport and export carbon dioxide.
OPPORTUNITIES
Kehler said there are discussions on lifting
the current ban on CCS and aligning with the
London Protocol, an international agreement
regulating the export of waste including CO2,
which will provide clear signals for Germany to
use gas while remaining committed to climate
targets.
This would open the door to a variety of
opportunities including securing natural gas
supplies on a longer-term basis and continuing
to burn the fuel in critical sectors if it is
used as feedstock for clean blue hydrogen, with
the resulting carbon dioxide stored in CCS.
One area that will be under scrutiny will be
the decarbonization of heating, the second
largest gas consuming sector after industry,
which burns around 254TWh (24billion cubic
meters) annually.
“The decarbonisation of the heating sector is
an emotional and complicated issue,” Kehler
said. “It was a major breaking point of the
previous government and has created headaches
in the business because it’s not clear how they
would tackle issues. There is a campaign to get
rid of gas-fired heating but it’s not clear
what that means in practice.”
STIMULATING DEMAND
Kehler said the ability of the current
government to ease the debt brake and pave the
way for a multi-billion-euro stimulus for
investments in infrastructure, including
energy, would implicitly lift demand for
natural gas and electricity.
Several areas of growth could include the
construction sector, where Germany has been
falling significantly below targets to expand
the housing stock. Another area would be
defence.
“We see a shift towards investments in defence
which could have an impact on the German
economy,” he said.
“The Coalition Treaty [an agreement signed by
Germany’s mainstream centre right and centre
left parties CDU/CSU and SPD] focuses on lead
markets where the state has influence and which
could decarbonise quicker such as green steel
and defence technology, which could be a driver
for new economic activity,” he added.
Kehler said some sectors such as the chemical
industry which was severely hit by rising
energy costs in the wake of Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine have seen a modest comeback but
added that a share of the production that
closed down or relocated may be lost for now.
IMPORTS
Despite the economic difficulties faced by
Germany following the energy crisis of 2022, he
questioned the viability of a possible
regulated industrial price for electricity or
gas that would help consumers to reduce costs.
He said a more efficient option would be to
reduce taxes to a minimum level rather than
subsidise grid transmission tariffs to keep
costs low.
The expected surge in gas production globally
could bring additional benefits to industrial
consumers and Kehler believes that closer
relations with the US, as the world’s largest
exporter of natural gas, could be beneficial
both economically and politically.
He said current discussions on the potential
return of Russian gas supplies via the idled
Nord Stream 1 or 2 corridors were not
particularly helpful.
“From the point of view of supply we have lots
of idle routes through Ukraine or Yamal [via
Belarus and Poland] and before we have a
discussion on Nord Stream we should put the
focus on those transport routes in case Russian
gas comes online.
“However, we don’t see that [the return of
Russian gas] happening, in fact we see the EU
discussion moving in opposite direction
[towards banning Russian gas imports],” he
added.
Kehler admitted that natural gas was very much
part of the geopolitical discussions between
the US and Russia and related to the future of
Ukraine in a post-war scenario.
Ammonia21-May-2025
Hals Agro became the second company to
inject biomethane into Ukraine’s gas grid
Second plant in Kyiv to double capacity by
end of 2025 amid planned first exports
EU certification key to unlocking export
potential
LONDON (ICIS)– Ukrainian agribusiness “Hals
Agro” plans to begin exporting biomethane to
the EU and double its production output to
6mcm/year by the end of 2025.
Speaking to ICIS Mariia Bielozerskykh,
assistant to Hals Agro’s CEO Serhiy Kravchuk
said that Ukraine’s gas transmission system
served as a conduit for Russian gas flows to
Europe, but “today that same infrastructure
holds the potential to be repurposed for the
delivery of domestically produced green gas to
both Ukrainian and European markets.”
BIOMETHANE PRODUCTION IN CHERNIHIV
In December 2024, Hals Agro became the second
Ukrainian company after Vitagro Group to inject
biomethane of its own production to the
Ukrainian gas transportation system and inject
it into Ukrainian underground gas storage
facilities.
The company’s first plant in Chernihiv,
launched in 2023, currently supplies around
3mcm of biomethane made from “manure, sugar
beet pulp and corn silage” per year.
A second plant, now under construction, in
Kyiv, is projected to bring total output to
6mcm/year and “remains on schedule for
commissioning by the end of this year,
coinciding with our first exports of biomethane
to the European Union,” the company confirmed
to ICIS.
Abundant feedstock supplies generated from
cereal cultivation, sugar processing, dairy
farming, and livestock allows Hals Agro to turn
organic waste into renewable gas and digestate,
which in turn returns to the soil as
fertilizer.
As such, biomethane presents the opportunity to
“reduce dependence on imported fuels while
fostering a truly circular economy.”
SUPPLY SCALABILITY DEPENDS ON EU INTEGRATION
Hals Agro’s planned production scale-up
coincides with the initial wave of Ukrainian
biomethane exports to the EU, as demand for
renewable gases rises under the REPowerEU
strategy.
The company aims to begin exports to the EU by
the end of 2025 but as Georgii Geletukha, head
of the Bioenergy Association of Ukraine (UABIO)
warned
last week, further exports hinge on
regulatory alignment and export certification.
Namely integration into the EU’s Union Database
(UDB) for renewable gases.
“Certification through the Union Database will
enable us to demonstrate the quality and
sustainability of our product,” said
Bielozerskykh, adding that a “robust and
predictable market” must be developed to
support Ukraine’s biomethane sector.
To that end, “firm, long-term commitments from
the EU concerning biomethane imports – together
with streamlined certification procedures,
cross-border trade mechanisms and reliable
guarantees of origin,” are needed to “send a
clear market signal and encourage investment,”
according to Bielozerskykh.
POST-WAR RECONSTRUCTION
Ukraine faces a record 4–6bcm gas import need
this year due to production losses and low
reserves. With forward contracts showing no
summer softening, domestic biomethane could
emerge as a valuable, sustainable alternative
over dependence on fossil fuel imports,
especially if producers such as Hals Agro can
scale up.
Looking ahead to Ukrainian reconstruction,
Bielozerskykh stressed that “decentralized
energy solutions will be essential for
rebuilding rural communities and ensuring a
reliable energy supply in areas where
centralized infrastructure has been damaged or
destroyed” by Russian missile attacks.
At the Danish-Ukrainian agro-technological
business conference in April, Oleh Ryabov, head
of renewable energy at Hals Agro, emphasized
that expanding biomethane production could
shift the focus in Ukraine away from grain
exports to food and feed production, turning
“traditional agrarian regions [into]
energy-profitable centers of a modern energy
and agro-industry.”
ICIS has expanded its coverage of the
emerging biomethane market via the development
of the topic page “European biomethane: data,
news and analysis”. Click here to
access
Polypropylene21-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–The ceasing of hostilities on
both trade and war fronts are the focus of this
month’s European PE and PP podcast, which
assesses the impact of the US and China
de-escalating their
eye-watering tariffs battle for 90 days and of
the India-Pakistan ceasefire.
Senior editors Vicky Ellis and Ben Lake look at
May’s price trends, how US-China trade
relations are influencing sentiment
in Europe, and are joined by senior editor
Nadim Salamoun to discuss President Trump’s
announcement regarding lifting sanctions on
Syria, and how Pakistan’s market responded to
its ceasefire with India.
They also highlight ICIS coverage from the
latest Asia Petrochemical Industry Conference
(APIC) in Thailand, including how petrochemical
demand may ramp
up as US lifts Syrian sanctions, how South
Korea is mulling petchem
rationalization, and another ICIS podcast on
Asian C2 players’ survival strategies.
Podcast edited by Will Beacham

Global News + ICIS Chemical Business (ICB)
See the full picture, with unlimited access to ICIS chemicals news across all markets and regions, plus ICB, the industry-leading magazine for the chemicals industry.
Crude Oil21-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Japan’s overall chemical
exports rose by 4.9% year on year to yen (Y)
1.05 trillion in April, even as automobiles and
other imports to the US slipped amid US
tariffs, official data showed on Wednesday.
Exports of medical products, categorized
broadly under the chemicals segment, rose by
13.2% year on year to Y119.1 billion, the
Ministry of Finance (MOF) said in a statement.
Overseas shipments of organic chemicals fell
3.0% year on year to Y177.8 billion in April,
while exports of plastic materials rose by 4.9%
to Y298 billion.
By volume, shipments of plastic materials fell
by 2.9% year on year to 451,274 tonnes.
Japan’s total exports rose by 2% year on year
to Y9.16 trillion in April, while imports
slipped by 2.2% to Y9.27 trillion.
This resulted in a trade deficit of Y115.8
billion.
By destination, total exports to the US – the
country’s largest export destination – fell by
1.8% year on year in April, while overall
shipments to the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) were up by 1.9%.
Japan’s overall exports to China declined by
0.6% year on year in April, and shipments to
the EU fell by 5.2% year on year.
Sweeping US tariffs, which include a 25% tariff
on automobiles, steel and aluminium, and a
further 10% baseline tariff rate on most
countries, have spooked Japan, an automobile
powerhouse.
Japan also faces further 24% “reciprocal”
tariffs beginning in July unless it can
negotiate a trade deal with the US.
Petrochemicals20-May-2025
NEW YORK (ICIS)–Wells Fargo has downgraded
US-based Westlake to ‘equal weight’ from
‘overweight’ on a weaker outlook for
polyethylene (PE) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC).
“We believe industry operating rates in North
America for PE and PVC started Q2 2025 on a
weaker note (low 80s) due to tariff
uncertainty, making it difficult for Westlake
to post quarter-on-quarter EBITDA (earnings
before interest, tax, depreciation and
amortization) growth in Q2 2025,” said analyst
Michael Sison in a research note.
“As a result, PVC and PE pricing fell in April
versus March, with potential for further
declines in May,” he added.
The analyst slashed his 2025 earnings per share
(EPS) estimate on Westlake to zero from a prior
$2.60, and his 2026 forecast to $2.60 from a
prior $4.90.
For the upcoming Q2, he now sees a loss of
$0.33 per share versus prior expectations of a
profit of $0.95 per share.
“We expect PVC prices will not see the usual
seasonal acceleration during construction
season given weakness in the housing market,
though we anticipate a normal seasonal decline
later this year,” said Sison.
Shares of Westlake fell $3.22, or 4.1%, to
$76.20 at the close of trading on 20 May 2025,
hitting a new 52-week low.
(Thumbnail shows pipe made out of PVC. Image by
Shutterstock.)
Ammonia20-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Relatively stable demand and
evolving global supply dynamics are expected in
European ammonia and acrylonitrile (ACN)
markets in 2025.
In this latest podcast, global ammonia editor
Sylvia Traganida and Europe ACN editor Nazif
Nazmul share the latest developments and
expectations for what lies ahead.
Ammonia players are expecting European
demand from the nitrates market to pick up soon
Availability is due to tighten with
scheduled turnarounds in Saudi Arabia and
Indonesia
Ammonia prices globally are softening due
to a lack of major demand
Geopolitics-led macroeconomic challenges
dampen prospects of ACN derivatives demand
resurgence
Balanced-to-long ACN supply dynamics
anticipated to endure
Gas20-May-2025
Bundled product to be offered after usual
capacity allocated on monthly basis
If approved by regulators, this could
benefit Ukraine and TSOs along the route
Use of Trans-Balkan corridor in line with
EU Russian gas phaseout roadmap
LONDON (ICIS)–Gas transmission system
operators (TSOs) along the Trans-Balkan route
are looking to establish a single bundled
transmission capacity product that would allow
gas imported into Greece to be shipped to
Ukraine at a uniform discounted tariff,
according to a letter sent by the operators to
national regulators and seen by ICIS.
TSOs in Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova and
Ukraine are proposing to offer a ‘route
product’ which would connect several border
points.
This means that, rather than paying for
capacity separately, companies would be able to
book the full route at a single tariff.
The route will be used for supplies to Ukraine
only and will not allow companies to access
domestic virtual trading points along the
Trans-Balkan corridor for now.
If approved, the product will be offered on a
temporary basis between June–September 2025,
but could be extended if it proves viable.
The proposed Route 1 would involve the
following interconnection points:
Kulata/Sidirokastron (Greece-Bulgaria)
Negru Voda/Kardam (Bulgaria-Romania)
Isaccea/Orlovka, Kaushany, Grebenyky
(Romania-Ukraine, Ukraine-Moldova,
Moldova-Ukraine)
LOWEST AVAILABLE CAPACITY
Subject to regulators’ approval, the capacity
offered at each interconnection point (IP) will
be the lowest available firm capacity at any of
the IPs along the route and will be matched in
the other IPs.
This principle will apply on the remaining
available capacity after the usual capacity is
allocated at rolling monthly auctions in line
with EU rules.
“This approach will ensure that the offered
Route 1 product consists only of capacity which
was not booked, [for which] market participants
have not expressed their interest in booking it
during the standard auctions and would
otherwise remain unutilized. This solution will
also reinforce the principles of sustainable
competition and solidarity,” the grid operators
said in the letter seen by ICIS.
The proposed Route 1 product is planned to be
offered on the Hungary-based Regional Booking
Platform (RBP) on a monthly basis, on the 4th
Monday of each month immediately preceding the
month of delivery.
To guarantee the completion of auctions on the
same day, operators will apply a uniform price
algorithm.
DISCOUNTED TARIFF
The capacity of Route 1 product will be offered
at a reserve price equal to the sum of the
reserve prices applicable for monthly capacity
at the IPs for the respective month.
The total sum of the tariffs charged by the
Greek , Bulgaria, Romanian and Moldovan TSOs
would be discounted by 25%.
The Ukrainian gas grid operator, GTSOU, already
applies a 46% short-haul tariff discount at the
Isaccea and Kaushany border points with Romania
and Moldova, providing the Grebenyky border
point with Moldova is also used.
More concretely, it currently costs just
over €10/MWh to export regasified gas from
Greece’s Revithousa LNG terminal to Ukrainian
storage.
If the proposed Route 1 uniform tariff is
approved, the total tariff from Greece up to
the Romanian-Bulgarian border would be
discounted by 25%. The remaining stretch from
Isaccea to Grebenyky crossing Moldova would be
discounted by 46% in line with existing tariff
reductions offered by GTSOU.
SUPPLY DIVERSIFICATION
The EU has identified the Trans-Balkan corridor
as one of the key transmission routes of gas to
help central and eastern European countries to
diversify away from Russian gas.
For now, Route 1 would mostly benefit Ukraine
as it seeks to secure over 5 billion cubic
meters (bcm) of gas to build up stocks ahead of
winter.
However, operators along the corridor would
also generate revenue as some of the capacity
had been idle in recent years.
Route 1 proposes the shipment of gas from
Greece to Ukraine, but there have also been
discussions to include delivery points from the
Alexandroupolis LNG terminal once it returns
from maintenance in August. This means that the
Interconnector Greece Bulgaria (IGB) could also
be added to the single product.
A source close to discussions told ICIS
operators are also considering an option for a
shorter route linking Bulgaria to Moldova or
Bulgaria to Ukraine.
Nevertheless, Bulgaria is a transit route for
Russian gas which means there is a risk that
those volumes would end up in Ukrainian storage
just as the EU is preparing to clamp down on
spot imports from Russia.
Crude Oil20-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Thailand’s GDP grew by 3.1%
in the first quarter of 2025, but the southeast
Asian country has slashed its GDP forecast amid
looming US tariffs and uncertainty over a
global trade war, official data showed on 19
May.
2025 GDP growth revised to 1.3-2.3%
Trade surplus improves but domestic
manufacturing remains weak
Response to US tariff threat essential –
NESDC
Amid declines in spending across major
categories, private consumption rose by 2.6%,
down from 3.4% in the previous quarter, the
National Economic and Social Development
Council (NESDC) said in a statement.
Exports by southeast Asia’s second-largest
economy surged by 15.0% year on year to $80.4
billion in the first quarter, the strongest
growth in 13 quarters, fueled by electronics
and rubber.
Imports rose 7.1% to $72.3 billion in the first
quarter of 2025, driven by a rise in consumer
goods and raw material imports.
Manufacturing activity remained subdued despite
a surge in merchandise exports, economists from
Singapore-based UOB Global Markets &
Research said.
The robust export performance helped the trade
surplus rise to $8.2 billion from the previous
quarter’s $5.4 billion.
“Growth was driven mainly by services and
agriculture, while manufacturing remained
weak,” UOB said.
2025 OUTLOOK
In response to high household and corporate
debt burdens, along with a global economic and
trade slowdown, Thailand has revised its GDP
growth forecast downward by 1.0% to within
1.3-2.3%, with a midpoint forecast of 1.8%.
“Key supporting factors include the increased
public investment expenditure, the continued
expansion of private consumption amid low
unemployment and inflation rates, and the
continued recovery of the tourism sector and
related services,” the NESDC said.
Thailand still faces 36% “reciprocal” tariffs
from the US, although these were suspended for
90 days back in April.
Meanwhile, UOB maintains its 2025 GDP growth
forecast at 2.0%.
Thai authorities said priorities for the
remainder of 2025 should include quickening
budget disbursement; addressing trade
protectionist policies through responsive
measures; and safeguarding the manufacturing
sector from unfair trade practices.
It advised investigating dumping practices and
“other unfair trade measures” used by major
exporting countries.
“Affected entrepreneurs should be supported in
accessing procedures for initiating
anti-dumping, countervailing duty, and
safeguard investigations,” the NESDC said.
Thailand will also offer larger tax incentives
to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in
a bid to mitigate US tariff threats, according
to the Board of Investment on 19 May.
Focus article by Jonathan Yee
Butadiene20-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–A fire broke out at South
Korea-based tire manufacturer Kumho Tire at its
Gwangju plant in the south of the country on 17
May, suspending operations at the plant.
The fire, which took place at the company’s
Plant 2, broke out at 7am local time (22:00
GMT) and firefighters were dispatched, with
containment levels at over 90% by 18 May,
according to South Korea’s National Fire
Agency.
Kumho Tires issued an apology on 18 May and
said it is working with the fire department
“and other relevant authorities” to extinguish
the fire.
It is also investigating how the blaze started.
“We … are responding systematically and
responsibly to all procedures, including damage
recovery, resident protection, and cooperation
with relevant authorities,” Kumho Tire said.
“The expected date of production resumption and
other changes will be re-announced as details
are confirmed,” said Kumho Tire in a bourse
statement on 19 May.
The Gwangju plant accounts for 19.7% of Kumho
Tire’s total global capacity, the company said.
Demand losses for raw materials such as
synthetic rubbers – an important component for
tires – may be contained as the company is
expected to raise operating rates at other
sites to minimize disruptions as a result of
the fire, market sources said.
Kumho Tire is considering plans to substitute
Gwangju plant production by utilizing its
Gokseong plant as well as plants located
overseas, sources said.
Additional reporting by Ai Teng Lim
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