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Speciality Chemicals15-Jan-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–HB Fuller plans to shut down
nearly one-third of its plants globally and
drastically reduce the number of warehouses it
has in North America, the US-based adhesives
producer said on Wednesday.
When HB Fuller completes the shutdowns in its
fiscal year of 2030, it will have 55 plants
globally, down from 82, the company said.
By the end of 2027, HB Fuller will have 10
warehouses in North America, down from 55.
HB Fuller expects to cut annual pre-tax costs
by $75 million/year by the time it completes
the shutdowns. The company expects to spend
$150 million over the next five years to shut
down the sites.
“Our manufacturing footprint consolidation,
coupled with our planning and logistics
reorganization, are important steps in our
strategic plan to achieve an EBITDA margin
consistently greater than 20%,” said Celeste
Mastin, CEO. “These actions will not only
reduce costs through improved capacity
utilization, they will also enable us to better
serve our customers and reduce future capital
expenditure requirements.”
As an adhesives producer, HB Fuller’s raw
materials include tackifying resins, polymers,
synthetic rubber, plasticizers, and vinyl
acetate monomer (VAM).
Crude Oil15-Jan-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–A ceasefire and hostage release
agreement between Israel and Hamas announced on
Wednesday is unlikely to have much of an impact
on crude oil and chemical markets, though it
could lower the geopolitical premium.
The agreement was reached through diplomacy by
the US, Egypt, and Qatar, and will be
implemented for the most part by the incoming
administration of President-elect Donald Trump,
US President Joe Biden said in remarks from the
White House.
ICIS feedstocks analyst Barin Wise said he does
not expect that the deal will have a meaningful
impact on crude oil markets because the
affected region is not oil producing.
“This may trim the geopolitical premium in
crude since it eliminates a hot spot in the
Middle East,” Wise said. “However, if we look
at the market today, crude is up big on other
factors, more than offsetting any effect the
ceasefire may have.”
Crude prices surged on Wednesday largely in
response to fresh US sanctions on Russia,
which the International Energy Agency said
could crimp global supply.
Futures prices for WTI settled on Tuesday at
$77.50/bbl and rose to $79.51/bbl before
midday. WTI settled at $80.04/bbl on Wednesday.
IMPACT ON SUEZ CANAL
TRAFFIC
The agreement could help with capacity
constraints in commercial shipping as container
ships have been avoiding the Suez Canal for
more than a year because of attacks by Houthi
rebels on commercial vessels.
Ships have been forced to use the much longer
route around the Cape of Good Hope, which
tightened shipping capacity and pushed costs
for shipping containers higher.
The reopening of the Suez Canal would have the
greatest impact on normalizing the
Asia-to-Europe container shipping route, but
would also affect Asia-US rates, as shipping
capacity would surge once carriers were able to
access the shorter route.
Container ships and costs for shipping
containers are relevant to the chemical
industry because while most chemicals are
liquids and shipped in tankers, container ships
transport polymers – such as polyethylene (PE)
and polypropylene (PP) – are shipped in
pellets.
They also transport liquid chemicals in
isotanks.
Thumbnail image shows a crude oil tanker.
Photo by Shutterstock
Recycled Polyethylene Terephthalate15-Jan-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–In December 2024, the European
bioplastics industry met in Berlin at the
European Bioplastics Conference (EBC) to
discuss innovations, barriers to growth and the
future outlook for production capacity, demand
and changes in legislation. ICIS Recycling
Analyst Alexandra Tomczyk attended the
conference and updates us on the current state
of play for the bioplastics market.
Some of the key takeaways included:
Global capacities are set to grow rapidly
in the next 5 years
It’s unclear how the rise of bioplastic
packaging will impact the goals set in
Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulations
Bioplastics are only one of a range of
tools needed to improve the sustainability of
plastics
Global News + ICIS Chemical Business (ICB)
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Crude Oil15-Jan-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–The latest tranche of US
sanctions on Russia’s oil trade could
affect flows from the country, while
weather-related production shut-ins in North
America could also impact global supply, the
International Energy Agency (IEA) said.
Announced on 10 January, the US imposed
aggressive new sanctions on Russia’s oil trade,
naming 183 vessels, including Russia-owned
tankers and the ”shadow vessels” understood to
be utilized to evade trade blockades.
The shadow fleet refers to ships indirectly
owned or controlled by Russia through shell
companies or intermediaries to evade detection
and sanctions.
Over 100 of the sanctioned tankers had
transported Russian crude to China and/or India
in 2024, according to Matt Wright, lead freight
analyst at data and analytics firm France-based
Kpler.
“When it comes to buyers, China and India, in
general, tend to steer clear of dealing
directly with tankers and entities blacklisted
by the US Treasury,” he said in a note earlier
this week.
US moves “may affect oil supply flows” the IEA
said in its latest oil market report, but
official purchases of Russia crude will still
be possible at certain price points.
“Exports on non-shadow tankers remain viable
for Russian oil purchased below price caps,”
the IEA said.
Further complicating the early 2025 supply
picture is scope for production constraints in
the US in the event of extreme weather, with a
winter freeze last year cutting output in the
US and Canada by over 1.8 million barrels/day.
A smaller drop is expected this year, but there
could still be scope for weather in the region
to tighten supplies, the IEA said.
Potential for additional US sanctions on
Iran-origin oil to be introduced by the new
administration could also hit global supplies,
the agency added, with sentiment already
driving some players to pill back from oil
supplies from Iran and Russia.
“There is heightened speculation that the
incoming US administration will take a tougher
stance on Iran’s oil exports, compounding the
impact of US Treasury sanctions on Tehran,” the
IEA said.
1.5 million barrels day of additional supply is
expected from non-OPEC countries this year ,
and total output growth of 1.8 million/barrel
day against 1.05 million barrels/day demand
growth, according to the agency.
While supply growth is likely is likely to be
sufficient to cover demand, the fresh Russia
sanctions could provide more headroom for OPEC+
signatory countries to release more barrels
into the market after delaying the end dates
for some production cuts.
OPEC, also releasing its latest market
predictions on Wednesday, left 2025 demand
growth forecasts unchanged at 1.4 million
barrels/day, and non-OPEC+ supply growth
projections at 1.1 million barrels/day amid
global GDP expansion of 3.1%.
The cartel projects that demand and non-OPEC
supply growth will remain around 2025 levels
next year.
Focus article by Tom
Brown
Thumbnail photo: An oil pipeline running
through Alaska, US (Source: Shutterstock)
Speciality Chemicals15-Jan-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Inflation in the UK eased by 0.1
percentage point in December as compared with
the previous month, slightly tapering the
steady upward movement of consumer pricing in
the country in recent months.
UK inflation dipped to 2.5% in December
compared with 2.6% the previous month as upward
movement for transport costs was offset by
lower hotel and restaurant prices, according to
the UK Office for National Statistics (ONS).
Upward price pressure from services, which has
remained stubbornly high, eased slightly to
4.4% compared with 5% in November.
A decline in inflation levels could potentially
reduce pressure on the UK government after a
decline in the value of the sterling and a
surge in borrowing costs amid unease over
public spending cuts, global volatility over
the prospect of fresh US tariffs, and
inflation.
Speciality Chemicals15-Jan-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–The German economy contracted
0.2% in 2024 – the second consecutive year of
economic decline for the eurozone’s biggest
economy – driven by energy costs, increasing
export competition and economic uncertainty,
according to the first calculations from the
Federal Statistical Office (Destatis).
As the country rounds off two years of economic
decline, preliminary data for Q4 2024 points to
a 0.1% decline, the agency added, with a full
announcement incorporating more data scheduled
for 30 January.
Manufacturing output dropped 3% in the year,
according to Destatis, with production in
energy-intensive industries such as chemicals
and metal-working hit particularly hard.
The decline in the construction sector was even
sharper, with output shrinking 3.8% over the
course of the year.
“Cyclical and structural pressures stood in the
way of better economic development in 2024,”
said Destatis president Ruth Brand.
Speciality Chemicals15-Jan-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Chinese oil company CNOOC and
Anglo-Dutch energy major Shell have taken a
final investment decision (FID) to expand their
joint petrochemical complex in Daya Bay,
Huizhou in southern China.
The expansion by their joint venture firm CNOOC
and Shell Petrochemicals Co (CSPC) is
expected to be completed in 2028, Shell said in
a statement.
Financial details of the investment were not
disclosed.
The expansion will include a third
cracker with a planned capacity of 1.6
million tonne/year of ethylene; as well as
associated downstream derivatives units
producing chemicals including linear alpha
olefins
It will also include a new facility which will
produce 320,000 tonnes/year of high-performance
specialty chemicals such as polycarbonates (PC)
and carbonate solvents.
CSPC is a 50-50 joint venture owned by Shell
Nanhai BV, a subsidiary of Shell, and CNOOC
Petrochemicals Investment Ltd, an affiliate of
CNOOC.
(Recasts first two paragraphs for clarity)
Speciality Chemicals14-Jan-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Ocean carriers will increase
blank sailings around the Lunar New Year
holiday to support elevated container rates,
but now that the labor issues at US Gulf and
East Coast ports have been resolved, some
analysts think rate growth will slow, or
shippers could even see lower rates.
Emily Stausbøll, senior shipping analyst at
ocean and freight rate analytics firm Xeneta,
said spot rates may now begin to fall but
warned that shippers still face other supply
chain threats in 2025.
“Looking ahead, it is likely spot rate growth
will now soften on trades into the US from
Asia, suggesting a brighter outlook for
shippers negotiating new long-term contracts,”
Stausbøll said.
“Shippers must remain cautious, however,
because it will not take much for freight rates
to begin spiraling once again, particularly
given the ongoing conflict in the Red Sea and
the return of [President-elect Donald] Trump to
the White House, which could escalate the
US-China trade war,” Stausbøll said.
Alan Murphy, CEO of Sea-Intelligence, defines
the four-week Lunar New Year period as the week
of the holiday plus the following three weeks.
Murphy said carriers have so far scheduled
blanked capacity of 9.0%, which is in sharp
contrast with the 22.8% blanked in 2024, and
the average reduction of 18.3% from 2016-2019.
For context, the blanked percentage in 2021
(where pandemic demand was surging) was higher
at 10.7%.
“Under normal circumstances, this would mean
significant blank sailings announcements in the
upcoming weeks, since it is highly unlikely
that carriers would be satisfied with this
level of excess capacity,” Murphy said. “This
would result in a situation reminiscent of 2023
and 2024, where significant capacity cuts were
made very close to Lunar New Year.”
CHANGING ALLIANCES
Several major carriers are restructuring
alliances in 2025, which is also adding some
uncertainty to shipping.
Shipping alliances are agreements between
carriers to collaborate globally on specific
trade routes.
This will be the most significant shift in
alliances since 2017, according to analysts at
freight forwarder Flexport.
The changes will see Mediterranean Shipping Co
(MSC) breaking from the 2M alliance with Maersk
and will service customers alone with its
expanded fleet now the largest in the market.
MSC said it will incorporate more direct call
services.
Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd will form the Gemini
Alliance, with a reduced number of port calls
that they say will improve reliability.
The Ocean alliance consists of OOCL, Evergreen,
COSCO, and CMA CGM.
The Premier alliance will be made up of Ocean
Network Express (ONE), South Korean shipping
line HMM, and Taiwan’s Yang Ming.
Judah Levine, head of research at online
freight shipping marketplace and platform
provider Freightos, said it remains to be seen
if there will be any improved service metric
from the shifts.
“The rollout and adjustment period will
probably stretch into March,” Levine said.
“This is going to coincide with easing seasonal
demand, so it could be a factor that pushes
rates down if we do see some competitiveness
between the new alliances that they compete for
customers.”
Levine also said the adjustment period could
lead to increased schedule disruptions as
vessels are being moved into place for these
new services.
CEASEFIRE, SUEZ CANAL
On a side note, container ships have been
avoiding the Suez Canal for more than a year
because of attacks by Houthi rebels on
commercial vessels.
A ceasefire in the Gaza
conflict could potentially end attacks in the
Red Sea, reopening the Suez Canal.
This would have the greatest impact on
normalizing the Asia-to-Europe container
shipping route but would also affect Asia-US
rates as shipping capacity would surge once
carriers no longer must divert away from the
Suez Canal.
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.
They also transport liquid chemicals in
isotanks.
Focus article by Adam Yanelli
Speciality Chemicals14-Jan-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–The rally in crude markets
could get continued support from cold weather,
sanctions and a recovery in demand from China,
the CEO of US crude producer Hess said on
Tuesday.
Oil markets are important to the US chemical
industry because prices for crude influence
prices for several commodity petrochemicals.
Since the first day of trading in 2025,
front-month Brent crude futures have risen by
nearly 7%.
Oil demand could be several hundreds of
thousands of barrels of oil a day higher
because of the cold winter, said John Hess CEO
of Hess and chairman of the American Petroleum
Institute (API), an oil trade group. He made
his comments during API’s State of American
Energy presentation.
A further rise in oil demand could come from
continued economic growth in the US and a
recovery in China.
“They are going to do everything they can to
stimulate their economy,” he said “I would not
bet against China for two years in a row.”
During the end of 2024, Hess suspects that oil
demand shrank in China because of the slowdown
in the nation’s economy.
The third leg of support for oil markets will
come from geopolitical tensions, Hess said.
On 10 January, the US Department of the
Treasury
introduced more sanctions on vessels that
carry Russian oil.
“The initial numbers that are out there are up
to a million barrels a day of impact of supply
that might have trouble getting into the market
for Russia,” Hess said. “There could be another
1 million barrels a day from Iran.”
If sanctions and other factors cause a large
enough spike in oil prices, Saudi Arabia and
other members of OPEC have spare capacity that
they can use to stabilize the oil market, he
said.
PROSPECTS FOR PERMIT REFORM, EXTENDING
TAX CUTSSenator John Thune
(Republican, South Dakota) said Congress may
opt to address energy, military spending and
border security in one bill and extending tax
cuts in a second bill.
The tax bill will make permanent nearly all of
the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA). This was
a campaign promise made by Donald Trump, who
will be sworn into office on 20 January.
WAYS TO ROLL BACK EV
PERKSThune said Congress could
use the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to
repeal a waiver that California needed to adopt
its Advanced Clean Car II (ACC II) program,
which gradually phased out sales of vehicles
powered by internal combustion engines.
The California program is a lynchpin for
similar programs adopted by 12 other states and
territories. If California loses its waiver,
then those other states and territories cannot
adopt their programs.
The fate of the ACC II program
could become a legal dispute over state
versus federal power that would need to be
settled in court.
Trump’s predecessor, President Joe Biden,
introduced two other auto programs that critics
say are so strict, they act as effective bans
on ICE vehicles.
The Environmental Protection Agency’s
(EPA’s) recent
tailpipe rule, which gradually restricts
emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) from light
vehicles.
The Department of Transportation’s (DoT’s)
Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE)
program, which mandates stricter
fuel-efficiency standards.
Thune doubts that Congress can use the CRA to
roll back the tailpipe rule.
Nonetheless,
Trump may find other ways to scale back or
repeal the tailpipe rule and the stricter CAFE
standards during his first days in office.
Even though EVs make up a small share of
overall US auto sales, they are important to
the chemical industry because they consume more
plastics than their counterparts that are
powered by internal combustion engines.
EVs are also creating demand for new polymers
and fluids that can meet their unique material
challenges.
Thumbnail shows snow. Image by
Xinhua/Shutterstock
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