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Ammonia02-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–There is now 93% of the US corn
crop planted with soybeans at 84% completed,
according to the latest crop progress report
from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).
For corn, the 93% rate is ahead of the 2024
level of 90% but is equal to the five-year
average of 93%.
Minnesota and North Carolina are the leading
states with 99% of their acreage completed.
Corn emergence has climbed to 78% and is above
the 72% level from 2024 and the five-year
average of 77%.
For corn conditions, there is 1% being listed
as very poor, 4% as poor and 26% as fair. The
crop rated as good is 57%, with 12% still as
excellent.
Farmers have advanced soybeans plantings to
84%, which is ahead of the 77% rate from 2024
and the five-year average of 80%.
Minnesota has 97% of their crop finished,
followed by both Louisiana and Iowa at 96%.
In the first update on soybean conditions,
there is 1% being listed as very poor, 4% as
poor and 28% as fair. The crop rated as good is
58%, with 9% as excellent.
Cotton plantings have reached 66% and sorghum
is now at 46%, with the spring wheat crop 95%
completed.
Petrochemicals02-Jun-2025
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado (ICIS)–A clearer
picture on the ultimate level of US tariffs
could lead to a surge in pent-up demand for
chemicals and plastics, said the CEO of Dow.
“As we saw with COVID-19, the more people sit
on the sidelines, the more there’s a build-up
or a pent-up desire to do something… demand is
going to come. And when it comes, it tends to
bounce back in a big fashion,” said Jim
Fitterling, CEO of Dow, in an interview with
ICIS.
Fitterling spoke to ICIS on the sidelines of
the American Chemistry Council (ACC) Annual
Meeting.
Tariff uncertainty has caused businesses to put
projects and other investments on hold, he
noted.
“At the beginning of this year, I think
everybody thought with the new administration
[that] 2025 will be better than 2024. But as we
sit here at the mid-point of 2025, I don’t
think anybody’s predicting a big H2 spike [in
demand],” said Fitterling.
“It would be crazy for me to try to predict it
right now, but if we can get some certainty
around the tariffs and what the levels are
going to be, and a feeling that ‘this is it’,
we can go forward from here. The sentiment will
turn more positive, and the markets move on
sentiment,” he added.
NAVIGATING TARIFFSDow is
navigating the tariff environment well through
an international trade operations team with
decades of experience and great lines of
communications in all markets, he noted.
“We haven’t seen any dramatic impact on our
ability to move product and sell product
because of tariffs,” said Fitterling.
However, the uncertainty has caused customers
to pull back a bit, he added.
“But I think more of that has been worked out
and things are starting to flow, and you’re
starting to see that people are realizing that
they’re not just going to be able to absorb
these tariffs. They’re going to have to pass
along [costs],” said Fitterling.
“Some of these costs [are being passed along]
and some product is continuing to move. [But] I
would say people in general are still very
cautious,” he added.
The CEO cautioned that while the market may see
greater clarity by July after the 90-day pause
starting 9 April on higher levels of US
reciprocal tariffs comes to an end, it could
take longer.
DOW PE EXPORTS MOVING
ALONGMeanwhile, Dow’s exports of
polyethylene (PE) from the US are running well,
he said.
“Everybody was expecting a big hiccup [in
exports] in the month of April, but things
moved relatively well. And of course, China
never put tariffs on imports of plastics
materials, even on the ethane [feedstock],”
said Fitterling.
On 24 April, an unofficial China proposed
tariff exemption list of 131 US products worth
around $46 billion, or 28% of total imports,
including PE, along with other chemicals and
key feedstock ethane, was circulated.
Two weeks prior to this, ICIS began picking up
on some China PE importers asking for
previously canceled US PE orders to be
reinstated for June arrival, noted Harrison
Jacoby, director of PE at ICIS.
“[China] didn’t put any tariffs on those
because they need them, for their own
manufacturing industry and to make the products
that they turn around and re-export. It’s only
logical,” he added.
Interview article by Joseph
Chang
Front thumbnail photo of polyethylene
pellets (Source: Shutterstock)
Ammonia02-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–InterContinental Energy (ICE),
developer of the world’s largest planned
hydrogen project, could cut the premium of
renewable ammonia over carbon-price-adjusted
grey ammonia by more than 50%, ICIS data shows.
Speaking to ICIS at the World Hydrogen Summit
2025 in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, ICE
co-founder and chief executive officer
Alexander Tancock explained to ICIS that the
company’s large-scale hydrogen projects could
produce hydrogen at $3/kg or ammonia at
$650/ton.
ICE projects are some of the largest renewable
energy and hydrogen projects on earth. The
company is developing three projects, two in
Australia – Australian Renewable Energy Hub
(AREH) and Western Green Energy Hub (WGEH) –
and one in Oman called Green Energy Oman (GEO).
The combined potential hydrogen output from all
three projects, once built, would be 8.4
million tons of hydrogen per annum (MTPA),
0.5MTPA more than total hydrogen consumption
combined across the EU 27, the UK, Iceland,
Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland in 2023,
according to the Clean Hydrogen Observatory.
CUTTING THE GREEN PREMIUM WITH LOW-COST AMMONIA
Taking into account freight costs for Australia
to Germany of $155/ton, sourced by ICIS on 28
May, ICE $650/ton renewable ammonia could
theoretically land in Europe with a delivered
cost of $805/ton.
Comparatively, ICIS assessed its
carbon-adjusted ammonia (the emissions from
grey ammonia are covered by the carbon price)
into north-west Europe price at $524/ton on 22
May. The resultant premium of the renewable
ammonia production from ICE’s future projects
over carbon-adjusted ammonia based on today’s
spot market would be $281/ton.
Tancock told ICIS that the company intends to
produce first molecules by 2032, meaning the
premium is likely to change over the next seven
years as the ammonia sector adapts to the
energy transition – and the EU carbon price
potentially rises.
However, considering ICE’s renewable ammonia
against alternative sources already discussed
in the market, the company’s projections offer
market participants a new look at the premium
sustainable projects could hold as the market
develops.
Comparatively, in July 2024 H2Global announced
the winner of its pilot auction, where
Fertiglobe bid a delivered price of renewable
ammonia of €1000/ton ($1130/ton).
The German H2Global program procures
international volumes of hydrogen or hydrogen
derivatives with the ambition of re-selling
them on the European market.
Hintco, the coordinator of H2Global, noted at
the time that it anticipates prices to be lower
in the future due to supply-chain efficiencies
and scaling of the hydrogen market.
Fertiglobe deliveries are guaranteed from 2028,
around four years ahead of when ICE could
produce its first molecules.
ACHIEVING LOW COSTS
Although Tancock explained that the ammonia
production would likely serve the Asian market,
the market information is nonetheless a sign of
potential cost reductions.
Tancock explained several key components behind
the projects that ICE is developing which
supports lower-cost hydrogen and ammonia.
When selecting a location, Tancock said that it
would ideally have “lots of wind, lots of
sun…ideally wind at night, sunny during the
day, because that would then give you a much
higher capacity factor… We looked for political
stability, a track record of delivering huge
infrastructure projects, finance, proximity to
markets…the Middle East and Australia [are]
markets where all of that comes together”. He
said that there are other locations where these
things come together, but ICE chose to focus on
Australia and the Middle East.
“If you look [at] how long it takes to permit a
project in Australia, it’s five-to-seven
years…Europe, it can be even longer, US as
well.”
Timing is another key element to reducing
costs. “Any large project takes a really long
time because of permitting process, design
process. The other thing is, there’s a real
decline in the cost curve right now of
equipment, whether it’s wind, solar or
electrolysers.”
Tancock believes that the cost curve is slowing
for wind and in solar, but that “it’s still
quite steep in electrolysers”. Therefore “the
ideal time to start bringing on really large
projects will be the 2030s, because if you
bring them on too early, you’re sort of locked
in quite a high cost base”.
ICE aims to bring its electricity-generating
capacity online ahead of its electrolysers.
Tancock explained that ICE will try to sell
electricity to local offtakers and that “there
should be some announcements later this year
about [selling the projects’ power supply]” as
two of them are located near to industry,
providing energy-intensive offtakers.
Another key component of lower-cost hydrogen
and ammonia supply is the ICE patented
P2(H2)Node system. The ICE nodes operate on the
basis of co-locating electrolysis plants with
wind and solar, removing the need to either
connect to or build electricity transmission
lines, and also through removing any losses
that come as a result of using high-voltage
lines.
Reduced infrastructure due to co-location and
reduced need for electricity transmission
systems account for a 10% reduction in capital
expenditure and a 10% increase in efficiency.
READY DEMAND AND OFFTAKE STRUCTURES
ICE intends to deliver its first electrons
before the end of the decade and first
molecules potentially in 2032, Tancock said.
Supporting such timelines is the clear
identification of demand and offtakers. For its
ammonia, ICE is considering selling from its
WGEH project into markets such as Korea, Japan,
Singapore and China, where Tancock noted
shipping as a potential offtake sector.
However, some of the primary offtake will be
local to the projects themselves.
“If you look at our two projects in Australia,
the northern project is sitting in the Pilbara,
which is the world’s biggest iron ore producer.
And just to put statistics on that, 800 million
tons a year come out of the Pilbara. If we
turned all 26GW [of our project’s capacity]
into green iron, we would [cover] 4-5% of
that…You would need about 600GW to decarbonize
the Pilbara.”
Similarly, for ICE’s project in Oman, Tancock
explained the proximity to Europe as a benefit,
but expanded to say that “Oman is currently…a
trans-shipment location for iron ore. So, they
import iron ore and turn [it] into pellets,
which then get exported,” he said. Oman is
currently seeking to decarbonize its export
iron pellets, which the ICE GEO project could
support and sell into.
Nonetheless, Tancock noted that offtake is
still the key issue for the development of
projects. “The technical aspects all bring
challenges, but they’re solvable. In that
sense, it’s really questions about offtake,” he
said.
“So it’s about bringing the costs of our energy
down, and then discussing with strategic
offtakers who are looking to offtake in the
2030s and beyond.”
ICE is currently in discussion with potential
offtakers, Tancock explained, stating that on
the molecule side “we’ll be signing those in
2027, 2028, so we’re working towards those
offtakes at the moment”.
Project developers speaking to ICIS regularly
consider both the duration of offtake
agreements and the total percentage of the
project’s output that they would sign under a
long-term deal.
For ICE, Tancock stated that its projects’
output would need to be entirely contracted.
“In the moment, I can’t see us doing much
merchant. Now, you know, some people will say
‘oh we could do 80% contracted, 20% merchant,’
[but] all [of] that [is] to be seen…But I would
anticipate it’ll be 100% allocated.”
When discussing duration, Tancock said that the
ideal would be “very long term” but that it’s
unlikely to be achievable at the moment,
although “those are conversations that are
ongoing”.
Reflecting on contracting, Tancock explained
that he believed there is a role for
governments to support. “You will see
governments come in a little bit to help
facilitate some of these earlier offtakers.”
“They did it for LNG, they did it for [nuclear
power]. They’ve done it for renewables. They’ve
done it for oil and gas. So I think you will
see that,” he said.
“The first LNG shipments were all backed by
very long-term offtakes…20-year offtakes.”
GOVERNMENT MANDATES
Expanding on the role of governments, Tancock
highlighted that obligations for renewable or
sustainable products were the right direction
for the market to go. Discussing renewable
energy, Tancock said that this was driven by
government demand, penalties etc.
However, Tancock noted that “the harder part we
have with molecules is molecules tend to be
traded a lot…The molecules come from here and
they’re there. So that’s the trickier part
we’re facing now when we’re trying to introduce
green molecules…how do you, on an
intra-regional and intercontinental level,
manage that flow? Because if the benefits are
flowing through to Oman, why would the German
taxpayer keep paying?”
As a solution, Tancock drew from recent
successes with the International Maritime
Organisation (IMO), stating “this [the IMO] is
a global regulator who’s now put a global tax
[on its stakeholders]”, meaning “no country
pays, and no country suffers more than anyone
else”.
For hydrogen and ammonia, “things are
happening,” Tancock said, such as the
development of green corridors between
different countries. “Until we get that, it’s
very difficult to see sustained demand in some
sectors…IMO is game changing. I think the IMO
will show, is showing, that it can be done, but
it will take now coordination,” Tancock said.

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Speciality Chemicals02-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Dow is exiting a carbon fiber
and derivates joint venture (JV) with Turkey’s
Aksa Akrilik Kimya Sanayii as it continues to
focus on core downstream businesses, it said on
Monday.
The US chemicals producer is selling its 50%
stake in DowAksa to its JV partner for an
expected $125 million.
The sale, which is subject to regulatory
approvals and other conditions, is expected to
close in the third quarter.
“Dow’s decision to exit the joint venture,
which was
formed in 2012, is consistent with Dow’s
best-owner mindset strategy of focusing on its
core, high-value downstream businesses,” the
company said in a statement.
Ethylene02-Jun-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 30 May.
Brazil’s PE market assumes ADDs on
US, Canada material to be imposed from
June
Brazil’s polyethylene (PE) sellers this week
are encouraging customers to bring forward
purchases on the assumption that the
government is to impose antidumping duties
(ADDs) on US and Canadian material from June.
US ethylene market braces for supply
ramp-up as demand stays
unsettled
After a heavy turnaround season that began in
January, the US ethylene market is preparing
for a wave of fresh output that threatens to
tip the sector back into oversupply as demand
continues to face economic and trade policy
headwinds.
Brazil postpones decision on
US-Canada PE antidumping
duties
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.
UPDATE: US trade court rules against
Trump’s emergency tariffs on global
goods
A US court ruled on Wednesday that the
president cannot impose global tariffs under
an emergency act, voiding all but the
sectoral ones that the nation imposed against
nearly every country in the world.
INSIGHT: Court ruling to remove
nearly all US chem tariffs imposed in
2025
A court ruling will leave the US some room to
impose tariffs on imports of plastics and
chemicals, but if it remains in place, it
will eliminate virtually all the duties that
the country imposed on those materials –
opening the way for other countries to lift
their retaliatory tariffs imposed on the
nation’s substantial exports of
petrochemicals.
Appeals court allows US to maintain
chem tariffs
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.
Tricon Energy emphasizes ability to
pivot quickly in face of tariff volatility –
CEO
In an increasingly volatile and uncertain
world with a constantly changing US tariff
regime throwing fuel on the fire, agility to
adjust and pivot is more important than ever
for a global chemical distributor, said the
CEO of US-based Tricon Energy.
Speciality Chemicals02-Jun-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Here are some of the
stories from ICIS Latin America for the
fortnight ended on 30 May.
NEWS
Brazil’s Braskem denies
linking PE price increases to antidumping
expectationsBraskem has
firmly denied it was preparing polyethylene
(PE) price increases for June in anticipation
of antidumping duties (ADDs) on US and
Canadian imports, with a spokesperson at the
Brazilian petrochemicals major calling such
claims “absolutely unfounded”.
Brazil postpones
decision on US-Canada PE antidumping
dutiesBrazil’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
Brazil’s PVC prices
could pick up on higher ADDs; Argentina and
Colombia to benefitSome
sources in the Brazilian polyvinyl chloride
(PVC) market expect prices to rise between
10% and 15% in coming weeks after the
government sharply increased antidumping
duties (ADDs) on US material.
Mexico announces
definitive ADDs on imports of Chinese
PETMexico has announced it
will impose definitive antidumping duties
(ADDs) on Chinese polyethylene terephthalate
(PET) imports from 30 May 2025, according to
official news from the China Trade Remedies
Information website.
Mexico protects
domestic industry with revised $195/tonne
duty on US caustic soda
importsOn 29 May 2025,
Mexico’s Ministry of Economy published in the
Official Gazette (DOF) the Final Resolution
of its review of the countervailing duty on
imports of liquid caustic soda from the US.
Argentina’s
manufacturing March output up 4.2%; Milei’s
party win in local election boosts
cabinetArgentina’s
manufacturing sectors output rose by 4.2% in
March, year on year, below the overall
increase in output in the economy at 5.6%,
the country’s statistical agency Indec said
this week.
INSIGHT: Chile’s strong
economic data yet to trickle down to
chemicals and
votersChile’s healthy
growth in Q1 surprised on the upside this
week, adding to earlier, better-than-expected
indicators but all the positive news have yet
failed to lift the chances of a governing
party set to return to the opposition
benches.
LatAm’s chemicals faces
severe truck driver shortage amid safety
concernsLatin America’s
chemicals transportation sector is grappling
with a
severe driver shortage, an aging workforce,
and mounting safety challenges that threaten
regional supply chains, according to industry
executives this week.
Panama Canal faces
capacity challenges as it explores new
business modelsThe Panama
Canal is working to develop new products and
services for different client segments while
managing capacity constraints that have
affected operations, particularly following
the severe drought impacts of 2024, an
executive at the Panama Canal Authority (PCA)
said.
Brazil’s Braskem stock
shoots up on reports billionaire Nelson
Tanure aims to acquire Novonor
stakeBraskem’s stock rose
sharply in Friday trading after reports
citing unnamed sources said Brazilian
entrepreneur Nelson Tanure would be seeking
to acquire Novonor’s controlling stake at the
petrochemicals major.
Brazil prosecutors sue
China’s EV major BYD for slave labor, human
traffickingBrazil’s Public
Ministry of Labor (MPT) this week filed a
civil action against Chinese automaker BYD
and two contractors for allegedly subjecting
220 Chinese workers to conditions analogous
to slavery and human trafficking.
PRICING
LatAm PP international
prices increase in Chile, Peru on higher
offers from
AsiaInternational
polypropylene (PP) prices were assessed as
higher in Chile and Peru on the back of
higher offers from Asia.
LatAm PE prices
unchanged, discussions shift to
JuneDomestic and
international polyethylene (PE) prices were
unchanged across Latin American countries.
Innova announces June
PS price increase in
BrazilInnova has announced
a 10% price increase, excluding local taxes,
on all grades of polystyrene (PS) sold in
Brazil, effective 1 June 2025, according to a
customer letter.
Petrochemicals02-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Click
here to see the latest blog post on
Chemicals & The Economy by Paul Hodges,
which looks at the growing risk of a
Depression, while investors are busy being
distracted with Bitcoin.
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.
Crude Oil02-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–South Korea’s petrochemical
shipments declined by 20.8% in May while its
semiconductor exports surged, official data
showed on 1 June.
Petrochemical exports in May fell largely due
to international oil prices falling below
$65/barrel, which caused a fall in
petrochemical unit prices by 13.8% from 1-25
May, South Korea’s Ministry of Trade, Industry
and Energy (MOTIE) said in a statement.
The country’s overall exports fell by 1.3% year
on year to $57.2 billion in May – the first
year-on-year decline since January – while
imports fell by 5.3% year on year to $50.3
billion.
“Exports to both of our key markets – the US
and China – declined, and it appears that US
tariff measures are affecting the global
economy as well as South Korea’s exports,” said
Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy Ahn
Duk-geun.
Semiconductor exports recorded their
second-highest performance of all time as
demand for artificial intelligence (AI)-related
products increased, rising by 21.2% year on
year to $13.8 billion in the month, while
automobile exports fell by 4.4% year on year.
By region, exports to the US, the world’s
largest economy, fell by 8.1% year on year amid
tariffs imposed on the country.
Exports to China, the second largest economy in
the world, fell by 8.4% on drops in
petrochemical and semiconductor shipments.
A broad 10% US tariff has been in effect since
early April, while higher tariffs, including a
25% duty on South Korea, are currently
suspended for 90 days.
However, the US on 31 May threatened to double
steel and aluminium tariffs to 50% from 25%
currently.
In response to the US tariffs, Ahn said South
Korea’s government would work with their US
counterparts on a “mutually beneficial
solution”, while also implementing tariff
response vouchers worth won (W) 84.7 billion
($61.7 billion)
($1 = W1,373.70)
(recasts lead and paragraph 8 for clarity)
Visit the ICIS Topic Page: US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy.
Speciality Chemicals02-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended
30 May.
Europe PA market
expected to face continued weak demand;
supply projected to remain balanced to
long
Weakened demand and stable supply in the
Europe phthalic anhydride (PA) market are
expected to continue into June.
Moody’s downgrades
Sasol on weak chems, oil markets
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.
ExxonMobil to sell its
Gravenchon, France refinery to Canada’s North
Atlantic
ExxonMobil is selling its refinery at
Gravenchon, France, to Canadian refining
group North Atlantic.
Clariant rejects fresh
€1 billion damages claim from OMV
Clariant has rejected OMV’s claim for around
€1 billion in damages for competition law
infringement, the Swiss producer announced.
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