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Ammonia12-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Ridley Corporation has agreed to
acquire Dyno Nobel’s fertilizer distribution
business for (Australian dollar) A$300 million,
the Australian animal nutrition company said on
Monday.
The deal to buy IPF Distribution includes an
option to acquire its Geelong North Shore
property for A$75 million.
The Phosphate Hill fertilizer manufacturing
operations, and the closure and remediation
costs associated with the Gibson Island and
Geelong manufacturing operations are excluded
from the deal, Ridley said.
IPF Distribution is part of Incitec Pivot
Fertilisers, a manufacturer and distributor of
fertilizers within the wider business of
explosives maker Dyno Nobel.
Completion of the transaction is expected by Q3
2025 and no later than 30 November, subject to
certain agreed conditions.
Ammonia12-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Fertiglobe has agreed to acquire
Wengfu Australia’s distribution assets as part
of a strategic expansion strategy, the urea and
ammonia producer said on Monday.
The acquisition will expand the Abu
Dhabi-headquartered firm’s downstream reach and
enhance access to Australian customers. It
currently supplies around 600,000 tonnes/year
of urea to the country.
The purchase price of Wengfu will be based on
net asset value plus a premium of around $8
million, with the final amount to be determined
at closing.
“Acquiring Wengfu’s assets marks a strategic
step in our value-driven growth strategy and
accelerates our commercial footprint in
Australia, one of the world’s fastest-growing
agricultural regions,” said Fertiglobe CEO
Ahmed El-Hoshy.
Fertiglobe said the transaction was expected to
be 2.8% and 4.1% earnings per share (EPS)
accretive before synergies in 2026 and 2027
respectively.
Closing of the deal is subject to customary
regulatory and legal approvals, it added in a
statement.
Petrochemicals12-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Click
here to see the latest blog post on
Chemicals & The Economy by Paul Hodges,
which looks at Apple’s dilemma on how to deal
with the trade tariff war.
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.

Global News + ICIS Chemical Business (ICB)
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Crude Oil12-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The US and China have agreed
to de-escalate trade war with sharp cuts on
tariffs by 14 May 2025, for an initial period
of three months, according to a joint statement
issued on Monday by the world’s two biggest
economies.
The statement was a result of a two-day
closed-door discussions between officials of
the two sides in Geneva, Switzerland over the
weekend.
The US will suspend the 24% tariffs on Chinese
goods for 90 days, while retaining
the remaining ad valorem rate of 10%
announced on 2 April. Tariffs announced
on 8 April and 9 April will be removed.
On China’s side, Beijing will lower its tariffs
on US imports to 10% and suspend the 24% duties
for 90 days, with other charges to be scrapped.
Additionally, China will adopt all necessary
administrative measures to suspend or remove
the non-tariff countermeasures taken against
the US since 2 April 2025.
After taking these actions, the parties will
establish a mechanism to continue discussions
about economic and trade relations, the
statement said.
Visit the ICIS Topic
Page: US tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals
and energy.
Speciality Chemicals12-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended 9
May.
Covestro Q1 EBITDA
halves, but in line with
expectationsCovestro’s Q1
2025 earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) halved
compared to last year, but were at the upper
end of its forecast, the German producer
announced on Tuesday.
European orthoxylene
contract price for May falls to six-month
lowThe Europe orthoxylene
(OX) contract price for May has fallen by
€50/tonne to its lowest level in six months,
driven by softer feedstock mixed xylenes
(MX) and gas costs in April.
European Commission to
begin investigation into PET imports from
Vietnam, TurkeyThe
initiation of an investigation by the
European Commission into polyethylene
terephthalate (PET) imports into the EU from
Vietnam and Turkey is imminent, sources said.
LOGISTICS: Red Sea
ceasefire could boost Suez Canal, collapse
freight rates, heap pressure on Europe
chemicalsThe ceasefire
between the US and Houthis in Yemen may crash
freight rates and increase import pressure on
chemical producers in Europe if it is
permanent and traffic returns to the Suez
Canal.
Power12-May-2025
Serbian utility EPS inks long-term PPA
from 168MW wind farms
This could accelerate energy plans, boost
PPA plans and have a bearish impact on spot
power prices in the region
The country plans to have 1.3GW renewable
capacity by 2027
WARSAW (ICIS)–The signing of a new power
purchase agreement (PPA) is set to support
Serbia’s energy transition plans by 2027,
local traders told ICIS.
This comes as state utility Elektroprivreda
Srbije (EPS) announced a 15-year PPA from two
wind farms (Alibunar 1 and Alibunar 2) with a
total 168MW capacity, EPS said on 8 May.
“EPS will take over all the produced
electricity, and the purchase and balancing
price is determined on market principles,
which provides an incentive to investors and
allows EPS to make additional profits. This
energy will also provide significant,
additional security for the operation of our
electricity system and the supply,” said
Dusan Zivkovic, CEO of EPS.
“EPS receives cheap green energy, while
investors benefit from a guaranteed 15-year
PPA and an auction premium. As an
association, we advocate for the third round
of auctions to take place as soon as
possible, alongside the adoption of
appropriate regulations and a new three-year
auction plan,” said Danijela Isailovic,
manager at local renewable group OIE Serbia,
in a statement on 8 May.
In 2028, this capacity will be increased by
1GW from self-balancing power plants EPS is
developing with a strategic partner, and
renewable production is expected to reach 50%
of EPS’s total electricity output, added
Zivkovic.
MARKET IMPACT
“This PPA is a milestone for Serbia as it
will be a bearish driver for the local market
spot market as renewable capacity takes over
a large percentage of the current coal
output,” a local trader told ICIS.
EPS’s PPA will encourage the local industry
to forge more PPA deals, added another market
participant.
“Over the coming years, we expect at least an
additional 1GW of auction-winning plants to
be built and new PPAs to be signed,” a local
developer told ICIS.
TRANSITION PLANS
The large investors’ interest in Serbia’s
recent second
renewable tender is set to support Serbia’s
energy transition plans by 2027, energy
minister Dubravka Dedovic Handanovic said in
February.
The total capacity awarded was 645MW and the
offered prices were “competitive”, resulting
in €50.9/MWh for solar and €53.5/MWh for
wind, “significantly below market levels”,
said Handanovic.
Both auctions are supported through a
contract-for-difference (CfD) scheme for 15
years.
All renewable plants should be online by 2027
as the country targets at least 1.3GW of new
renewable capacity by the same period.
Currently, Serbia has 4.4GW of coal-fired
power, with coal and gas units representing
75% of the country’s energy mix, grid
operator EMS data indicated.
Crude Oil12-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Saudi Aramco’s first-quarter
net income fell by 4.6% year on year to Saudi
riyal (SR) 97.5 billion ($26 billion), weighed
down by a combination of higher cost and lower
oil prices.
in SR billions
Q1 2025
Q1 2024
% Change
Sales
405.65
402.04
0.9
Operating profit
191.36
202.05
-5.3
Net Profit
97.54
102.27
-4.6
Its total revenue in the first three months of
2025 increased by 0.9% year on year on higher
sales volumes for gas and refined and chemical
products, as well as higher traded volumes of
crude oil, the company said in a filing on the
Saudi bourse on 11 May.
Aramco’s average realized crude oil prices in
Q1 2025 stood at $76.3/bbl, down from $83.0/bbl
in the same period last year.
“Global trade dynamics affected energy markets
in the first quarter of 2025, with economic
uncertainty impacting oil prices,” Aramco
president & CEO Amin Nasser said in a
statement.
Saudi Aramco’s Q1 capital expenditures of $12.5
billion “support long-term strategic growth”.
New oil and gas discoveries in Saudi Arabia,
which is the world’s biggest exporter of crude
oil, “reflects sustained advantage in
exploration”, the company said.
In February 2025, Aramco entered a definitive
to acquire 25% equity stake in Unioil Petroleum
Philippines to support strategic growth in
downstream value chain.
In the following month, Aramco completed
acquisition of 50% equity interest in Blue
Hydrogen Industrial Gases Co aims to capitalize
on emerging opportunities for lower-carbon
energy.
($1 = SR3.75)
Thumbnail image: A view of Shaybah oilfield
in Rub Al-Khali, Saudi Arabia – 17 December
2018 (By VALDRIN
XHEMAJ/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
Ammonia12-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China is turning to hydrogen
as a potential lever in efforts to decarbonize
its aluminium industry, as regulators tighten
emissions rules, and global buyers demand
greener materials.
While still in early stages of deployment,
hydrogen is gaining attention for its possible
role in high-temperature heating, increasing
renewables in grid, and emissions reduction.
The move aligns with China’s broader ambition
to peak carbon emissions in the aluminium
sector by 2025 and support global net-zero
targets by 2050, as set by the International
Aluminium Institute (IAI).
Carbon market expansion enhances hydrogen’s
value in aluminium
Early adoption may offer global market edge
Significant potential, but barriers remain
In March 2025, China’s Ministry of Ecology and
Environment expanded the national carbon
trading market to include aluminium, steel, and
cement – raising market coverage from 40% to
more than 60% of national emissions. This
inclusion means aluminium producers will face
growing pressure to curb emissions or bear
rising compliance costs.
The High-Quality Development Plan for the
Aluminium Industry (2025–2027), recently
released by the Chinese government, makes clean
energy substitution a policy priority. The
strategy encourages increased use of renewable
electricity and pilot applications of hydrogen
in key production processes.
EMISSIONS PROFILE HIGHLIGHTS
DECARBONIZATION URGENCY
China’s aluminium sector is responsible for 85%
of emissions in the country’s nonferrous metals
industry. In 2023, aluminium-related emissions
hit 530 million tonnes, including 420 million
tonnes from electrolytic smelting, according to
the China Nonferrous Metals Industry
Association.
In 2024, the country produced roughly 43.7
million tonnes of electrolytic aluminium,
around 60% of global output.
In 2023, China produced about 41.59 million
tonnes of electrolytic aluminium, and the
segment consumed over 500 billion
kilowatt-hours of electricity, with each tonne
of aluminium requiring at least 12,000 kWh and
emitting an average of 12.7 tonnes of carbon
dioxide (CO2), according to the National Bureau
of Statistics, National Energy Agency and
Ministry of Ecology and Environment.
Most emissions are tied to primary production.
Industry estimates suggest over 95% of the
aluminium sector’s emissions stem from upstream
processes such as mining, refining, and
smelting, with energy use (electricity and
heat) accounting for three-quarters of the
total. Coal remains the dominant power source
in China’s aluminium sector.
The IAI and International Energy Agency (IEA)
outline three primary decarbonization pathways:
transitioning to low-carbon electricity,
reducing process emissions, and boosting
recycling rates.
GREEN ELECTRICITY TARGETS DRIVE
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
The IEA estimates the carbon intensity of
aluminium’s power supply must fall by 60% by
2030. Globally, about 55% of aluminium smelters
rely on captive power.
In China, more than 60% of aluminum smelters
owned captive coal-fired power generators by
September 2023, according to Ministry of
Ecology and Environment.
Electricity represents 30%-40% of aluminium
production costs in China, according to
industry sources. With renewable energy uptake
still limited and preferential electricity
pricing being phased out, aluminium producers
are under pressure to diversify power sources
and enhance flexibility via storage.
The Chinese government requires the sector to
raise clean electricity use to above 30% by
2027, up from less than 25% in 2023. This is
spurring investment in hydropower, wind, solar,
and hydrogen storage.
Shanghai Metals Market data show green
electricity accounted for over 25% of smelting
power in 2024. In provinces such as Yunnan,
Qinghai, and Sichuan, the share exceeded 80%,
while coal-dominant Xinjiang and Shandong
remained low at below 5% in 2023.
One pilot example is Dongfang Hope Group’s
Xinjiang facility, which uses a
wind-solar-hydrogen integrated system to meet
95% of its electricity demand, positioning it
as a “zero-carbon aluminium” site.
HYDROGEN GAINS TRACTION IN
HIGH-TEMPRETURE HEATING
Reducing non-electric emissions – especially
from alumina refining – presents another
challenge. Emerging technologies such as
mechanical vapor recompression (MVR), electric
calcination, and hydrogen-based burners are
being tested, although large-scale deployment
remains years away.
Hydrogen’s high heat value and clean combustion
make it a candidate to replace natural gas or
coal in calcination and smelting. The IEA’s
Hydrogen Review 2024 highlights multiple global
trials:
In Australia, Rio Tinto and Sumitomo are
piloting hydrogen calcination at the Yarwun
refinery with a 2.5 MW electrolyser and a
retrofitted calciner with a hydrogen burner.
Norway’s Hydro tested aluminum smelting
fired by hydrogen and produced 225 tonnes of
green aluminium at its Navarra plant in Spain,
approved by electric vehicles manufacturer
Irizar.
Tokyo Gas and LIXIL in Japan tested
hydrogen heat treatment for aluminium, finding
no impact on product quality.
Hydrogen-based aluminium production still
carries a steep price tag – up to $5,000 per
tonne versus $2,000 using conventional methods.
Analysts say the economics could shift if green
hydrogen costs fell below $2 per kg.
In China, Aluminum Corporation of China Limited
(Chalco)’s Qinghai subsidiary launched a 15%
hydrogen blend in natural gas for anode
calcination, cutting CO2 emissions by 370,000
tonnes annually.
CARBON TRADING ADDS FINANCIAL
INCENTIVE
With the aluminium sector now in China’s
emissions trading scheme, carbon becomes a
direct item in aluminium companies’ cost
structures.
The government supports reducing Scope 2
emissions – those from purchased electricity –
via renewable energy contracts and green
certificate (REC) purchases. These instruments
allow companies to offset emissions and
potentially trade surplus emissions carbon
allowances.
China issued 80 million RECs in 2023, but
aluminium producers bought less than 5%; with
expanded policy incentives, this could rise to
15–20% by 2027, according to industry sources.
Green hydrogen, as a quantifiable emissions
reducer, may also be monetized through carbon
credits.
China’s aluminium decarbonization strategy
depends on simultaneous progress across power
substitution, process innovation, and
recycling. Hydrogen is not the only solution,
but it is fast becoming part of the mix.
Though significant development potential for
adopting hydrogen, there are still barriers
ahead. High hydrogen production and logistics
costs, limited infrastructure with few
cost-effective delivery routes to factories,
and underdeveloped technologies like hydrogen
calcination will continue to limit scale-up.
Still, with the carbon market expanding and
global demand for green aluminium rising, for
China’s aluminium companies, investing early in
hydrogen may help secure a greener foothold in
an increasingly climate-conscious global supply
chain.
Analysis by Patricia Tao
Visit the Hydrogen
Topic Page for more update on
hydrogen
Gas12-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Here are the top stories
from ICIS News Asia and the Middle East for
the week ended 9 May.
S
Arabia’s SABIC swings to Q1 net loss amid
higher operating costs
By Jonathan Yee 05-May-25 11:36 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–SABIC swung to a net loss of Saudi
riyal (SR) 1.21 billion ($323 million) in the
first quarter on the back of higher feedstock
prices and operating costs, the Saudi Arabian
chemicals giant said on 4 May.
Ethane fuss cools for
NE Asia C2, positions reassessed over Labor
Day break
By Josh Quah 05-May-25 20:24 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–The early May holidays probably could
not have come at a more appropriate time for
Asia ethylene players, with players noting
that the pause in spot discussions was a good
time to take stock of positions going into
June shipment talks.
Malaysia’s Lotte
Chemical Titan narrows Q1 net loss on
improved margins
By Nurluqman Suratman 06-May-25 14:46
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–LOTTE Chemical Titan (LCT)
narrowed its first quarter (Q1) net loss to
ringgit (M$) 125.7 million ($29.7 million)
amid improved margins, the Malaysian producer
said on 5 May.
Singapore’s Aster
acquires CPSC at undisclosed fee
By Nurluqman Suratman 07-May-25 12:33
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Aster Chemicals and Energy
has reached a sales and purchase agreement to
acquire Chevron Phillips Singapore Chemicals
(CPSC) through its affiliate, Chandra Asri
Capital, at an undisclosed fee, the
Singapore-based producer said on Wednesday.
Vietnam’s economy to
slow despite exports jump, lower inflation –
Moody’s
By Jonathan Yee 07-May-25 16:16 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Escalating trade tensions with the US
are casting a shadow over Vietnam’s growth
trajectory in 2025, despite continued growth
in exports as well as lower inflation.
China SM plagued by
weak fundamentals and falling
feedstock
By Aviva Zhang 07-May-25 16:44 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–China’s styrene monomer (SM) prices
fell sharply in April, as a result of
decreasing crude oil prices and weak end-user
demand expectations caused by the China-US
tariff conflicts. The domestic market is
likely to face headwinds from supply,
feedstock and downstream sectors in May.
Asia refined glycerine
trades to Europe to be spurred by weak
Chinese demand
By Helen Yan 08-May-25 14:43 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–European demand for refined glycerine
may lend support to regional glycerine
producers in southeast Asia, who have been
faced with persistently sluggish Chinese
demand.
Asia VAM plant margins
to get a lift from westbound trades
By Hwee Hwee Tan 09-May-25 13:08 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia’s vinyl acetate monomer (VAM)
producers are eyeing improved netbacks from
expansion in westbound shipments as regional
trade margins narrow into the second quarter.
Asia capro remains
pressured by weak benzene, cautious demand
outlook
By Isaac Tan 09-May-25 13:11 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Spot prices for caprolactam (capro)
in Asia continued to soften in the week
ending 7 May, weighed down by persistent
losses in the upstream benzene market and a
lack of recovery in downstream demand.
China Apr export growth
slows to 8.1% amid tariff
uncertainty
By Nurluqman Suratman 09-May-25 16:03
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s export growth
slowed to 8.1% year on year in April from
12.4% in March in US dollar terms,
underscoring the increasing impact of US
tariffs amid ongoing uncertainty surrounding
a potential trade agreement.
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