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Speciality Chemicals15-Nov-2024
TORONTO (ICIS)–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.
The Maritime Employers Association (MEA) said
it received an order from the Canada Industrial
Relations Board (CIRB) to resume operations.
The federal government earlier this week
directed the CIRB to order the resumption
of all operations at Montreal, as well as
Canada’s West Coast ports, where
operations resumed on Thursday.
The MEA said it would work closely with the
longshoremen’s labor union Syndicat des
debardeurs and the Montreal Port Authority to
ensure operations resume safely and
efficiently.
Montreal is Canada’s second-largest port after
Vancouver. Last year, the Port of Montreal
handled a total volume of 35.3 million tonnes
of goods, according to its website.
Meanwhile, at US East Coast ports, a labor
dispute remains paused but there are
concerns about whether employers and unions
will reach an agreement by the 15 January
deadline.
LEGAL CHALLENGES
The labor unions representing the port workers
in Montreal and the Canadian West Coast ports
said they would challenge the government
intervention in court as it violated workers’
constitutionally protected rights to strike and
to negotiate better wages and terms.
Political commentators said that by intervening
in labor disputes and settling them through
binding arbitration, the government was siding
with employers.
The very expectation of a government
intervention encouraged employers to lock out
workers and then use the resulting economic
damage to put pressure on government to
intervene, they said.
Earlier this year, another labor union,
Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC), filed
a
court challenge against the
government’s move in August to intervene and
end a freight rail labor dispute. That case has
not yet been decided.
Additional reporting by Adam Yanelli
Thumbnail photo source: Port of
Montreal
Speciality Chemicals15-Nov-2024
BARCELONA (ICIS)–Donald Trump’s proposed
tariff hikes on major trading partners could
spark a trade war which will drive the end of a
globalized economy plus more local and circular
chemical supply chains.
US-China trade war would drag on economic
growth
World may return to more national and
intra-regional trade in chemicals
Trump could help drive the end of
deglobalization
Development of more local, circular supply
chains
Chemicals Q3 financial results show some
volume growth
But industry still at the bottom of a
trough
Lack of growth from automotive,
construction
In this Think Tank podcast, Will
Beacham interviews ICIS market
development executive Nigel
Davis 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.
Acrylonitrile15-Nov-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–PTT Asahi Chemical will cease
operations from 1 January 2025, according to
the company’s parent firms – Thailand’s PTT
Global Chemical (PTTGC) and Japan’s Asahi Kasei
on Friday.
It operates a 200,000 tonne/year propane-based
acrylonitrile (ACN) plant; a 70,000 tonne/year
methyl methacrylate (MMA) plant; and a 60,000
tonne/year acetone cyanohydrin unit in Map Ta
Phut, Thailand, according to ICIS data.
A business withdrawal plan for the 50:50 joint
venture company was approved by shareholders on
Friday, PTTGC said in a bourse filing.
Global News + ICIS Chemical Business (ICB)
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Propylene15-Nov-2024
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Southeast Asia’s propylene
market faces significant challenges in 2025,
with additional supply expected and freight
rates continuing to impact downstream demand.
In this latest podcast, ICIS senior editor
Julia Tan speaks with senior analyst Shariene
Goh to share the latest developments and
expectations for what lies ahead next year.
High freight rates likely to remain key
challenge to PP exports, which could weigh on
propylene demand
Southeast Asia to take price direction from
northeast Asia
Net deficit for Indonesia despite
Indonesia’s LINE project
Polyethylene14-Nov-2024
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–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.
As previously reported by ICIS, the
proposals to investigate came from polymers
major Braskem and were backed by Brazil’s
chemicals trade group representing producers,
Abiquim.
Braskem is the dominant PE producers in Brazil,
and antidumping duties (ADDS) on US- and
Canada-originated PE would considerably prop up
its domestic market position.
The start of investigation proceedings was
published in Brazil’s Diario Oficial da
Uniao (Official Gazette). The
investigation is to be carried out by the
Department of Commercial Defense (Decom), which
is part of the Ministry of Industry’s Secretary
of Foreign Trade.
Braskem filed on July 31 a petition to initiate
an investigation into the practice of dumping
of PE resins exports to Brazil with US or
Canadian origin.
The analysis of the evidence of dumping is to
consider the period from April 1, 2023 to March
31, 2024, while the period for analyzing
potential damage caused to domestic producers
is to consider the period from April 1, 2019 to
March 31, 2024.
“Due to the large number of producers/exporters
from the US and Canada identified in the
detailed data on Brazilian imports … the
producers or exporters responsible for the
largest reasonably investigable percentage of
the export volume of the exporting country will
be selected to send the questionnaire,” said
Decom.
“The absolute dumping margins determined for
the purposes of this document reached
$220.95/tonne and $264.99/tonne, and the
relative margins were 21.4% and 26.9% for the
US and Canada, respectively. It can be inferred
that, if such dumping margins did not exist,
domestic industry prices could have reached
higher levels, reducing or even eliminating the
effects of the investigated imports.”
Braskem said earlier in November it is lobbying
the Brazilian government to
extend ADDs on polyvinyl chloride (PVC)
beyond 2025 when they are due to expire.
In October, the government implemented higher import
tariffs on several chemicals, also after
heavy pressure by domestic producers and their
trade group Abiquim.
Additional reporting by Bruno Menini
Speciality Chemicals14-Nov-2024
HOUSTON (ICIS)–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.
For US companies working to export excess
volumes to balance year-end inventories, those
shipments need to be going out this week.
According to ICIS Senior Analyst Kelly Coutu,
increasing export shipments at year end for US
petrochemical producers trying to balance year
end inventories with weaker domestic demand is
becoming increasingly challenging.
“Container availability, especially to South
American west coast ports, have been cited by
several traders as problematic to secure,”
Coutu said.
Yusen Logistics said in a customer advisory
that rail terminals at the US West Coast are
congested, and inland point intermodal (IPI)
dwell times are up to 40 days with terminal
utilization above 85%.
Yusen cited Sea-Intelligence data through
September showing that global schedule
reliability has fallen to 51.4%, down by 1.2
percentage points from the previous month.
The average delay for late vessel arrivals
increased by 0.21 days month on month to 5.67
days – the third-highest figure for the month,
only surpassed by pandemic highs of 2021-2022,
according to Sea-Intelligence.
For cargo shipping out of West Coast ports,
Yusen said some rail carriers implemented
allocation restrictions because of a surge in
traffic, which caused delays in the cargo
staging area outside of the ports of Los
Angeles and Long Beach, although those
restrictions have largely been lifted at
present.
For cargo shipping out of East Coast ports,
Yusen said most of the major ocean carriers
have ended some routes and replaced larger
ships with smaller ones for higher volume
trades.
Hapag Lloyd is the only carrier that has
increased its capacity on these routes in the
past 12 months, Yusen said.
For cargo destined for South America, ports
along the east coast of the continent are
facing congestion and increased waiting times
due to high traffic volume.
Bad weather in southern Brazil forced cargo to
change routes to other ports, causing delays as
this new cargo was processed.
Additionally, ships delayed by the brief labor
strike at US East Coast ports are arriving in
South America, adding to the existing
congestion/delays.
Also, ports in Mexico are facing delays due to
bad weather affecting ports on the Atlantic
side. High occupancy rates at Manzanillo and
Lazaro Cardenas are also reducing how
efficiently they operate.
USEC PORT LABOR TALKS BREAK
DOWN
While the East Coast labor issue is paused,
concerns persist on whether the two sides can
reach an agreement by the 15 January deadline.
Talks broke down on Wednesday as discussions
centered around automation and semi-automation
at the ports.
The US Maritime Alliance (USMX), representing
the ports, said the union’s insistence on an
agreement that “would move our industry
backward by restricting future use of
technology that has existed in some of our
ports for nearly two decades” contributed to
talks breaking off.
The International Longshoremen’s Association
(ILA) said the USMX claim that its focus is on
modernization and not automation was
disingenuous.
“The ILA has always supported modernization
when it leads to increased volumes and
efficiency,” the union said. “We embrace
technologies that improve safety and
efficiency, but only when a human being remains
at the helm. Automation, whether full or semi,
replaces jobs and erodes the historical work
functions we’ve fought hard to protect.”
Thumbnail image shows a container ship.
Photo by Shutterstock
Gas14-Nov-2024
Traders agree that financial activity
exaggerates trends on European gas benchmark
TTF
The number of individual players from
investment funds is nearly the double of energy
companies active on ICE TTF as of 8 November
Their activity tends to be more frequent
despite lower total open positions
LONDON (ICIS)–The rising presence of
investment funds relative to physical traders
on the ICE TTF could exacerbate curve
volatility this winter.
While it is hard to attribute market movements
to these entities alone, many traders agree
that financial trading tends to exaggerate
trends.
What is undeniable is that their presence on
the market has grown steeply since Europe lost
access to its stable supply of pipeline gas
from Russia and became reliant on LNG, a global
commodity susceptible to global price drivers
and disruptions.
ICIS has previously observed
that shifts in investment funds’ net long
positions have correlated with TTF curve
movements since the fourth quarter of 2023, but
the causation is hotly debated.
Financial players tend to have a higher risk
appetite than physical ones, and are useful in
providing bids and offers on far-curve
contracts where there may not otherwise be any.
INDIVIDUAL POSITION HOLDERS
The Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) publishes
the “number of persons holding a position in
each category”in the weekly Commitment of
Traders (CoT) table.
The presence of investors grew by 1.7 times
from January 2023 to January 2024 based on
figures from ICE CoT reports collected from the
ESMA
register.
Meanwhile individual energy companies’ presence
(“commercial undertakings” per the CoT report)
increased just 1.4 times.
More recently, the investment fund total has
increased from 312 on 30 August to 365 on 8
November, while energy companies grew from 191
to 196. The ratio of funds to energy companies
went from 1.6 to 1.9 over that period.
“Investment firms or credit institutions”,
mostly banks, act on behalf of utilities and
financial players alike, and are therefore hard
to pin down. Their presence has remained
relatively constant around 60-70 individuals
throughout 2024.
While overall energy companies hold a much
larger amount of total positions – 1,900TW
compared to funds’ 606TW as of 8 November – the
latter comprises nearly double the amount of
individual traders.
“It depends what you do with the positions you
have,” one trader explained. “If I buy 100MW
Cal ’26 today and hold it for one year I don’t
move the market, but if I trade 500MW front
month every hour, day and week… you move the
market.”
Another trader mentioned hedge funds’
contribution to the current TTF Summer ’25 premium
over Winter ’25 :
“You know you’ll be full enough by winter, but
you don’t know if you can get enough gas in as
LNG supply is uncertain. And you know how a
bullish market trades, it’s not only utilities
and storage players in this market,” the trader
said, adding that hedge funds can also move the
market.
A third concurred, “I would say the front is
pushed up by financial players.”
Speciality Chemicals14-Nov-2024
TORONTO (ICIS)–The Port of Vancouver and other
Canadian West Coast ports will resume
operations on 14 November, 16:30 local time,
after a strike and lockout of about 730 foremen
who supervise more than 7,000 dock workers that
began on 4 November.
The Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB)
has issued an interim order to employers and
union to resume operations and continue working
until the board makes a final determination on
Tuesday’s government directions, officials
said.
The government directed the CIRB to
order the resumption of all operations at the
West Coast ports and at the Port of Montreal,
and to settle pending labor disputes through
binding arbitration.
The CIRB has scheduled a hearing for 18
November to hear from employers and unions on
certain questions that were raised with respect
to the government’s intervention.
The British Columbia Maritime Employers
Association (BCMEA), which represents West
Coast port employers, said it would work with
labor union International Longshore and
Warehouse Union (ILWU) and others to safely and
efficiently resume operations at the ports.
The Port of Vancouver, which is Canada’s
largest port by far, confirmed that it was
preparing for the resumption of operations.
Timelines would be terminal specific, with
container terminals expected to restart
operations early Friday, 15 November, it said.
More than Canadian dollar (C$) 22 million
($15.7 million) of chemistry and plastic
products was traded through Vancouver and other
West Coast ports each day in 2023, for a total
of C$8 billion for the year, according to the
Chemistry Industry Association of Canada.
MONTREAL
At the Port of Montreal, where labor
disruptions started on 31 October and employers
locked out about
1,200 dock workers on 10 November, the
Maritime Employers Association (MEA) said it
would take the necessary steps to ensure that
port activities resume as quickly as possible.
The MEA has not yet received an order from the
CIRB but expects to receive it later on
Thursday or on Friday, a spokesperson told
ICIS.
“As soon as we receive said order, we could be
operational within 12-24 hours”, the
spokesperson said.
The Port of Montreal, for its part, said that
cargo handling activities would gradually
resume over the coming days. However, it would
take several weeks to clear terminal backlogs
and fully restore supply chains, it added.
Container operations were still affected by the
labor disruption on Thursday, according to
information on the website of Termont, which
operates two of the port’s four container
terminals.
The unions representing the port workers in
Montreal and the West Coast ports said they
would challenge the government intervention in
court as the intervention violated workers’
rights to strike and to negotiate better wages.
Earlier, another labor union, Teamsters Canada
Rail Conference (TCRC), filed a court
challenge against the government’s
move in August to intervene and end a freight
rail labor dispute. That case has not yet been
decided.
Meanwhile, at US East Coast ports a strike has
been paused until 15
January.
($1=C$1.4)
Thumbnail photo source: Port of
Vancouver
Recycled Polyethylene Terephthalate14-Nov-2024
LONDON (ICIS)–European senior editor for
recycling, Mark Victory,
and Helen McGeough,
global analyst team lead for plastic recycling
at ICIS, joined senior editor for recycling
Matt Tudball to discuss
their highlights from the recent 3rd ICIS
Recycled Polymers Conference that was held in
Berlin on 7th November.
Topics covered ranged from ICIS’s own outlook
for the recycled markets, panel discussions on
collection systems and the ever-popular
chemical recycling sector, plus electrical and
electronic waste and EU regulation 2022/1616
around food contact, among others.
Some of the key takeaways included:
Unexpected positivity despite challenging
market environment
The need for and demonstration of strong
collaboration through the recycling chain
Regulatory uncertainty still a core
challenge for the recycling market
The issue of regulation was clearly on the mind
of many delegates, as the two surveys conducted
throughout the course of the conference show.
The first question was: “What do you see as the
key enabler to improved collection in Europe?”,
followed later in the day by: “What is the
missing piece of the puzzle to accelerate
chemical recycling growth?”
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