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Gas08-May-2025
European Parliament signs off storage
filling approach
Negotiations to find a compromise between
approach of Parliament and EU countries can
begin
First talks to take place on 13 May
LONDON (ICIS)–Talks to find a compromise on
lowering the EU’s gas storage targets will
begin on 13 May, after the European Parliament
adopted its negotiating mandate in a vote on 8
May.
Legislators greenlit the committee on industry,
research and energy
(ITRE)’s proposal that would lower the fill
target to 83% but allow for a target to fall as
low as 75% depending on market conditions.
The house also approved an amendment calling
for countries to “refrain from storing gas of
Russian origin” and for the EU to pursue an
immediate end to Russian gas and LNG imports.
A delegation from the Parliament will now begin
so-called trilogue negotiations with countries,
represented by the Council of the EU, and with
the European Commission also attending.
EU diplomats agreed the Council position on 11
April, with a target of 80% in unfavourable
market conditions, although a general aim of
90% full remains.
The rules would extend gas filling obligations
beyond their current expiry at the end of the
year through the end of 2027.
Lawmakers have indicated they wish for the
rules to apply to the rest of 2025, but these
cannot take effect until a deal is done and
published in the Union’s official journal.
Market expectations of a deal have caused the
Dutch TTF Q3 ’25 gas contract to flip to a
discount to the front winter as the EU
legislative process has progressed.
ICIS assessments showed the TTF Q3 ’25 discount
averaged €0.548/MWh below Winter ’25 between
9-23 April, correlating with details of the
Council position. The spread widened to
€0.955/MWh from 24 April-7 May, after the ITRE
committee vote suggested a speedy resolution to
negotiations.
The Dutch TTF Q3 ’25 held an average premium of
€2.769 over Winter ’25 during the first three
months of 2025.
PROPOSAL DETAILS
The proposal, in line with
the Council’s position, provides a window
between 1 October-1 December for shippers to
meet the target.
This time range would allow more flexibility,
“which would mean that at key deadlines gas
prices would not be much higher”, ITRE
committee chair Boris Budka, who leads the
parliament’s work on the file, told MEPs on 7
May.
EU energy commissioner Dan Jorgensen signalled
that the European Commission would work with
the co-legislators to ensure a swift compromise
in trilogues.
“I agree that such flexibility can alleviate
the current market situation, and I trust that
an agreement could be reached soon,” Jorgensen
said.
Poland, which holds the rotating Council
presidency until June, has stated a desire to
reach a provisional deal by the end of its
mandate, but the timescales remain uncertain.
LAWMAKER VIEWS
There was much political consensus around
lowering the targets, with German MEP Andrea
Wechsler saying a return to a market-based
structure was vital, due to the distortions
created by the rules.
The centre-right European People’s Party
grouping, the house’s largest, called for “a
new balance between supply, security and market
circumstances and thinking in free-market terms
as well,” she said.
However, Yvan Verougstraete of the centrist
Renew group called for Europe to take further
action by developing North Sea gas reserves and
creating a 90-day strategic gas reserve similar
to the one for oil.
Soda Ash08-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Solvay’s Q1 underlying net
profit from continuing operations fell to €102
million year on year from €119 million during
the same period in 2024 on customer caution
arising from macroeconomic uncertainty, the
Belgian chemicals firm said on Thursday.
In € million
Q1 2025
Q1 2024
% Change
Net sales
1,122
1,201
-6.6
EBITDA
250
265
-5.9
Underlying net profit from continuing
operations
102
119
-14.3
Basic Chemicals sales in Q1 2025 were down by
-6.0% compared to Q1 2024, the company said.
There was some softness in Soda Ash as
customers displayed caution amid macroeconomic
uncertainty, particularly in March.
Meanwhile, Solvay’s underlying earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization
(EBITDA) margin for Q1 rose by 0.2 percentage
points to 22.3% year on year from 22.1% in the
same period in 2024.
Soda Ash & Derivatives sales for the
quarter were down by -11.0% due to demand in
Europe and the US remaining low, while exports
through sea were softer sequentially,
especially in southeast Asia.
However, bicarbonate demand remained strong,
fueled by global trends.
“The current macro environment is uncertain and
filled with challenges that were not foreseen
at the start of the year. However, our
resilient global and local to local business
model will allow us to navigate these
challenges,” said Solvay CEO Philippe Kehren.
Solvay expects underlying EBITDA for 2025 to be
between €1.0 billion and €1.1 billion, towards
the lower half of the range if current market
conditions and currency exchange rates prevail.
Cost savings are expected at €200 million by
the end of 2025.
Ammonia08-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–US-based ExxonMobil Corp has
signed a long-term agreement to sell around
250,000 tonnes/year of low-carbon ammonia to
Japan’s Marubeni Corp, the companies said.
The fuel will primarily be supplied to Kobe
Power Plant – a fully owned subsidiary of Kobe
Steel Ltd – in Hyogo prefecture, located in the
west of Japan, the US oil and gas major said in
a statement on 7 May.
Marubeni has also agreed to acquire a stake in
ExxonMobil’s upcoming low-carbon hydrogen and
ammonia facility, located in Baytown, Texas,
the Japan-based trading firm said.
A final investment decision on the Baytown
plant is expected in 2025, and once running, it
can produce up to 1 billion cubic feet (bcf) of
low-carbon hydrogen daily, ExxonMobil said.
“By using American-produced natural gas we can
boost global energy supply, support Japan’s
decarbonization goals and create jobs at home,”
said Barry Engle, president of ExxonMobil Low
Carbon Solutions.
“Marubeni will take this first step together
with ExxonMobil in the aim of establishing a
global low-carbon ammonia supply chain for
Japan through the supply of low-carbon ammonia
to the Kobe Power Plant,” said Yoshiaki Yokota,
a senior managing executive at Marubeni.
“Additionally, we aim to collaborate beyond
this supply chain and strive towards the launch
of a global market for low-carbon ammonia,”
Yokota said.
Financial details of the transactions were not
announced.
Kobe Power Plant aims to co-fire low-carbon
ammonia with existing fuel by Japan’s fiscal
year 2030, supporting the reduction in CO2
emissions.

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Ethylene07-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Braskem-Idesa (BI) officially
launched the Terminal Quimica Puerto Mexico
(TQPM) on Wednesday, according to a notice from
the company.
After many years in the making, and at some
points, serious doubts about the companies
involved managing to put
together the necessary capital expenditure
(capex) for the terminal, in March ICIS could
visit the almost-finished facilities. Braskem
Idesa’s executives were relieved to finally see
the long-running construction almost finished.
Up to now, Braskem Idesa has been importing
ethane by ship, a system called Fast Track.
Before and during that, Braskem also depended
on Mexico’s state-owned energy major Pemex for
supply of ethane.
However, beleaguered Pemex, after years of
falling output, rising debts, and
mismanagement, did not follow the agreement on
several occasions and its ethane supply would
fall short of what it had been agreed, leading
to Braskem Idesa not having the feedstock
needed to produce PE.
Sources close to the situation reported to ICIS
last year that Pemex only got serious about the
ethane supply when threatened with being taken
to arbitrage international court – because it
is state-owned, that would have been the
necessary course of action.
As the ribbon was cut on Wednesday, most
executives present could now focus on the
future – undoubtedly more promising having its
own terminal to import the feedstocks needed.
Braskem Idesa holds a 50% stake in the terminal
with Advario, the Netherlands-based engineering
services provider.
The terminal will
allow BI to import 80,000 barrels/day,
enabling the company to operate at 100% of its
capacity at its integrated polyethylene (PE)
Ethylene XXI complex in Coatzacoalcos, Mexico.
The Braskem Idesa cracker in Coatzacoalcos has
1.05m tonnes/year of ethylene capacity and
downstream capacities of 750,000 tonnes/year of
high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and 300,000
tonnes/year of low-density polyethylene (LDPE).
In an interview with ICIS
in March, the CEO at TQPM, Cleantho de Paiva,
said the terminal would benefit Mexican
petrochemicals at large, not just Braskem
Idesa, by allowing the feedstocks it was
consuming up to now to be released to other
producers.
“This project has a very important impact on
the development of the national petrochemical
industry, because it’s precisely to complement
access to raw materials that we lack today.
With a capacity to import up to 80,000 barrels
per day of ethane, this will significantly
exceed the 63,000 barrels Braskem Idesa
currently requires for its operations,” said
Cleantho de Paiva.
“The issue of the lack of ethane in the country
is structural. Since the US is the largest
producer and exporter of petrochemical ethane,
building this terminal gives us access to
import sufficient raw material.”
“When the terminal comes into operation, Pemex,
which currently has an obligation to supply a
certain amount to Braskem Idesa, will no longer
have it and will be able to direct this raw
material to its own petrochemical complexes and
resume its operating capacity,” he added.
Braskem Idesa is a joint venture made up of
Braskem (75%) and Mexican chemical producer
Grupo Idesa (25%).
PE is the most widely used plastic in the
world, primarily found in packaging including
plastic bags, plastic films and geomembranes.
Article thumbnail: The terminal as seen in
March
Source: ICIS
Additional reporting by Johnathan
Lopez
Caustic Soda07-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Meteorologists at AccuWeather
are predicting a dynamic 2025 Atlantic
hurricane season, which begins 1 June, but
noted that the first tropical storm of the year
could emerge in just a couple of weeks.
“Around the middle of May, a large,
slow-spinning area in the atmosphere could
develop somewhere around Central America,
overlapping with part of the Caribbean and
eastern Pacific Ocean,” Brian Lada,
meteorologist and senior content editor, said.
“This phenomenon, known as the Central American
Gyre, can sometimes lay the groundwork for a
tropical depression or tropical storm to take
shape.”
AccuWeather said this is the best chance so far
this year for the first named tropical storm of
2025 to develop, both in the Caribbean and in
the eastern Pacific, although meteorologists
currently say the odds of development are low.
Tropical storms and hurricanes pose significant
risks to the North American petrochemical
industry because many of the nation’s plants
and refineries are along the US Gulf Coast in
the states of Texas and Louisiana.
They can also disrupt oil and gas production in
the US Gulf. In 2022, oil and natural gas
production in the US Gulf accounted for about
15% of total US crude oil production and about
2% of total US dry natural gas production,
according to the US Energy Information
Administration (EIA).
Even the threat of a major storm can disrupt
oil and natural gas supplies because companies
often evacuate US Gulf platforms as a
precaution.
While the season runs from 1 June to 30
November, September has seen the most tropical
depressions since 2000, as shown in the
following chart.
The chart also shows that it is not that
uncommon to see tropical depressions in May.
2025 ATLANTIC HURRICANE
SEASON
AccuWeather predicts 13-18 named storms, with
7-10 likely to become hurricanes and 3-5 of
those being major hurricanes, as shown in the
following table.
The meteorological firm is predicting 3-6 of
the hurricanes to have direct impacts to the
US.
Hurricanes are rated using the Saffir-Simpson
Hurricane Wind Scale, numbered from 1 to 5,
based on a hurricane’s maximum sustained wind
speeds, with a Category 5 storm being the
strongest.
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind
Scale
Category
Wind speed
1
74-95 miles/hour
2
96-110 miles/hour
3
111-129 miles/hour
4
130-156 miles/hour
5
157+ miles/hour
Meteorologists also warn that the season could
be like 2024 when several “super-charged”
storms caused damage and loss of life.
In 2024, Beryl entered the
record books as the earliest Category 5 on
record, Helene pummeled the
southeast US with catastrophic rain and
flooding, and Milton tore across
Florida with deadly flooding and dozens of
tornadoes.
AccuWeather Lead Hurricane Expert Alex DaSilva
said one of the biggest factors for tropical
development in 2025 is the abundance of warm
water available to fuel storms.
Water temperatures across the ocean, as well as
in the Gulf and Caribbean, are already well
above historical averages and will continue to
run warm throughout most of the year. This will
prime storms for explosive development.
“A rapid intensification of storms will likely
be a major story yet again this year as
sea-surface temperatures and ocean heat content
(OHC) across most of the basin are forecast to
be well above average,” DaSilva said.
The OHC measures not only the temperature of
the water but also how deep the warm water
extends, DaSilva said. A deep pool of warm
water provides much more fuel for hurricanes
than a shallow layer of warmth near the ocean’s
surface.
AREAS MOST LIKELY FOR HURRICANE
LANDFALLS
DaSilva said northern and eastern portions of
the Gulf Coast and the Carolinas are at a
higher-than-average risk of direct impacts this
season, as shown in the following map.
“Atlantic Canada and the northeastern Caribbean
are also at an increased risk of direct
impacts,” DaSilva said.
Colorado State University’s Weather and Climate
Research department said in its initial
forecast on 3 April it is predicting 17 named
storms, with nine becoming hurricanes and four
of them becoming major hurricanes.
CSU will update its forecast on 11 June, 9
July, and 6 August.
A hurricane season forecast is expected soon
from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA).
Crude Oil07-May-2025
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.
Inflation will stay below the government’s
target of 4.5% to 5% this year – Moody’s
Industrial output to slow due to poorer
global demand, US tariffs
2025 GDP growth forecast cut to 5.8% from
6.5%
Headline inflation rose by 3.1% year on year in
April, unchanged from March, while core
inflation, which excludes food and energy, also
remained at 3.1%, data by Vietnam’s General
Statistics Office (GSO) showed on 6 May.
Industrial production growth in April slowed to
8.9% year on year, down from a revised 9.9% in
March, displaying early signs of pressure on
the manufacturing sector.
“We expect growth to slow this year as reduced
global demand and higher tariffs on Vietnamese
goods in the US hurt manufacturing,” financial
intelligence firm Moody’s Analytics said in a
note on 6 May.
Externally, Vietnam’s exports surged 19.8% year
on year in April, outpacing March’s 14.5% rise,
while imports jumped 22.9%, up from 19%
previously.
The country still posted a goods trade surplus
of $600m in April, though markedly lower than
the $1.6bn recorded in March.
The US remained Vietnam’s largest export
destination through the first four months of
the year, but this position is increasingly
uncertain.
In early April, US President Donald Trump
floated a 46% tariff on Vietnamese imports,
which was quickly revised to a temporary 10%
levy for 90 days pending trade talks.
Moody’s Analytics expects Vietnam’s export
growth to slow over the remainder of 2025 as
the impact of higher US tariffs hits the
manufacturing sector.
It has downgraded its GDP growth forecast for
2025 to 5.8% from 6.5% to reflect US trade
policy and rising tariffs.
As part of its negotiation efforts with US
trade officials which will begin on 7 May,
Hanoi has proposed eliminating tariffs on US
imports and could increase sourcing from the US
to offset trade pressures.
The government is aiming for
8% GDP growth for 2025 despite risks from
US tariffs.
Focus article by Jonathan Yee
Visit the US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy topic page
Crude Oil07-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Thailand’s inflation turned
negative for the first time since March 2024,
falling 0.22% year on year in April 2025 amid
lower costs for energy products and personal
care products, the country’s Trade Policy and
Strategy Office (TPSO) said on 6 May.
Inflation falls 0.22% amid lower crude
prices
Economic uncertainty, US trade war weigh on
GDP
Thailand GDP projected to grow by up to
2.0% in 2025
Core inflation – excluding fuel and fresh food
prices – rose 0.98% in April, while there was a
0.21% decrease in inflation month on month from
March.
“The trend of the general inflation rate in May
2025 is expected to be at a level close to
April 2025,” the TPSO said.
Crude oil prices are falling and gasoline
prices are expected to trend downwards,
contributing to a negative consumer price index
(CPI).
The continuation of state subsidies would also
weigh on the CPI, keeping it negative.
The Bank of Thailand (BOT) reduced its key
interest rate to 1.75% from 2.00% on 30 April,
citing the US tariffs and its global trade war
causing uncertainty in the economy.
“The prevailing monetary policy framework seeks
to maintain price stability, support
sustainable growth and preserve financial
stability,” the BOT said.
“The Thai economy is projected to expand at a
slower pace than anticipated, with more
downside risks due to uncertainty in major
economies’ trade policies and a decline in the
number of tourists,” it added.
Accordingly, Thailand’s GDP forecast for 2025
has been downgraded to around 1.3% in 2025 and
1.0% in 2026, if trade tensions intensify and
US tariffs are set at higher rates, according
to the BOT.
On the other hand, if the 10% baseline tariffs
by the US remain, Thailand’s GDP growth is
forecast at 2.0% in 2025 and 1.8% in 2026, the
BOT said.
Further rate cuts are anticipated by
Singapore-based UOB Global Economics and Market
Research, possibly as early as the BOT’s next
meeting in June, to support growth.
“This reflects the central bank’s continued
focus on maintaining sufficient policy space
and its view that the full impact of global
trade tensions would become more apparent in
the second half of 2025,” UOB said in a note on
30 April.
Inflation is expected to remain below the lower
bound of the BOT’s target range of 1%–3%.
Focus article by Jonathan
Yee
Speciality Chemicals06-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Celanese will aim to weather
what is becoming an increasingly “uncertain”
second half of 2025 by reducing inventories and
keeping firm cost controls, but also by
reducing operating rates if demand is not
there, the CEO at the US-based acetyls and
engineered materials producer said on Tuesday.
Scott Richardson added that key end markets for
the company such as construction, automotive
and consumer goods remain somehow in the
doldrums, and occasional improvements in some
subsegments during H1 may have just been an
illusion of a strong recovery – before the
storm.
The CEO and the CFO Chuck Kyrish acknowledged,
however, there is a high degree of uncertainty
about whether slight improvements in H1 in some
segments represented genuine demand
improvements or temporary supply chain
restocking as some customers, them too, would
be preparing for a potential turbulent H2.
“We are not assuming anything right now. We are
continuing to be diligent on driving self-help
actions, [and] we are focused on reducing
inventory and are going to pull back on rates
if we see any kind of reduction in demand,”
said the CEO, speaking to reporters and
chemical equity analysts.
The CEO said that the company has been somehow
shielded from any direct tariff hit, as its
operations in China are mostly focused on the
domestic market, but nonetheless the current
uncertainty and instability will be one of the
factors to make the second half of 2025 an
uncertain one. He repeated that claim on
several occasions.
Celanese’s first-quarter sales
fell, year on year, although it managed to
narrow the net loss posted in the same quarter
of 2024, the company said after the markets
closed on Monday.
The producer also announced that as part of its
efforts to deleverage it is to fully divest its
electronic pastes and ceramic tapes producer
Micromax, acquired in 2022 as part of the $11
billion acquisition of DuPont’s Mobility &
Materials (M&M) business.
Despite the poor metrics for the first quarter,
the financial results beat analysts’ consensus
expectations which, together with the Micromax
divestment and others which could be on the
way, propped up Celanese stock by nearly 9% in
Tuesday afternoon trading.
AMID THE CHALLENGES,
SAVINGSThe CEO said Celanese
projects generating between $700-800 million in
free cash flow for 2025, driven by optimized
working capital management, lower capital
expenditure (capex), and comprehensive
cost-cutting measures totaling approximately
$60 million expected in the latter half of the
year.
The chemical producer recorded stronger orders
in March and April in its Engineered Materials
sales volumes, but its Acetyl chain business
delivered mixed results, with limited seasonal
improvement in key segments including paints
and coatings.
“In engineered materials, we saw a much
stronger March than we saw in January and
February. April orders were in line with that
March pickup, and the order book for May looks
very similar. We are seeing a volume pickup
from Q1 into Q2 from engineered materials. June
is too early to say [and] there’s some
uncertainty around where June orders will go,”
said Richardson.
“On the acetal side of things, we’re not seeing
the normal seasonal pickup that we would
typically see. Usually, Q2 is significantly
better volumetrically in sectors like paints
and coatings – we haven’t seen that. We’re
seeing some of that, but not nearly at the
level that we’ve seen historically in the
past.”
The CEO added that within that division,
however, the segment producing acetate tow has
posted higher sales volumes on the back of some
Q1 seasonality. The product is mostly used in
cigarette filters as well as Heat Not Burn
(HTB) products and demand has been on the rise
in countries like Indonesia, Bangladesh and
India.
Meanwhile, the producer’s beleaguered nylon
business, which accounts for approximately 75%
of the substantial $350 million profit
deterioration in its Engineered Materials
segment since 2021, has begun to stabilize
following capacity reductions and operational
adjustments.
However, executives acknowledged considerable
work remains to restore this segment to
acceptable profitability levels amid persistent
industry overcapacity and challenging pricing
dynamics.
“The industry has given up a lot of margins
over the last several years, and it’s
unsustainable. The actions that we started
taking last year around capacity reductions, us
flexing a different operating model here,
hasn’t been enough yet. We are starting to see
a stabilization here,” said the CEO.
“We’ve been very consistent that our focus is
on cash generation, and we are looking at a
myriad of options on the divestiture side. It’s
not just Micromax: we’ve talked about having a
portfolio of things we’re looking at.”
Capex has been reduced to maintenance levels,
providing “significant” year-over-year
improvement in free cash flow generation,
according to Kyrish.
Front page picture: Celanese produces
acetyls and other chemicals widely used
in the paints and coatings
sector
Picture source:
imageBROKER/Shutterstock
Gas06-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)– The electricity blackout which
hit the Iberian Peninsula at the end of April
has triggered widespread debate about the
causes of the outage and risks facing European
grids.
As an investigation has now been launched,
energy market expert, Aura Sabadus, spoke to
Volodymyr Kudrytksyi, former CEO of the
Ukrainian electricity grid operator, Ukrenergo,
about the challenges facing Europe’s
electricity transmission infrastructure and the
lessons it can learn from Ukraine’s unrivalled
efforts in keeping the grid stable even in the
face of war-related destruction.
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