The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Petrochemi­cal profits slammed by trade war

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In the next two years, the operating rates (of polyethyle­ne units) will be impacted as the capacity additions are faster than the demand addition.

Ashish Chitalia

Profits from making petrochemi­cals in Asia have plunged to their lowest in months as the unrelentin­g trade conflict between Beijing and Washington stifles Chinese demand for chemicals and plastics just as waves of new production start to come on line.

The global output capacity for polyethyle­ne, a key ingredient for plastics used in everything from piping to toys, is expected to exceed demand by three million tonnes by the end of 2020, compared to overcapaci­ty of 545,000 tonnes in 2019, data from commodity consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie showed.

That comes as new production is set to crank up in China, South Korea and Malaysia, although the United States and the Middle East will account for more than half of the new volumes.

“In the next two years, the operating rates (of polyethyle­ne units) will be impacted as the capacity additions are faster than the demand addition,” said US-based Wood Mackenzie principal analyst Ashish Chitalia.

Though analysts say polyethyle­ne profit margins are already at their narrowest in around seven years, ballooning supplies could drive them even lower – placing highcost producers under critical pressure.

The spread between prices for polyethyle­ne and feedstock naphtha gives an approximat­ion of how much profit petrochemi­cal makers can make.

Based on data from the Korea Petrochemi­cal Industry Associatio­n (KPIA), the average spread between high-density polyethyle­ne (HDPE) and naphtha feedstock costs in the second quarter was US$421.34 a tonne - the lowest quarterly average since 2012.

And the pressure is growing. The average spread for HDPE – used to make bo le caps, detergent tubs and piping – was down to US$414 a tonne in the week ended August 16.

Meanwhile a plastic known as linear low density polyethyle­ne (LLDPE), used in a host of products including food and non-food packaging, is similarly weak.

“The average LLDPE/naphtha spread for July was around US$418 a tonne and could fall below producer break-even levels of around US$400 to US$450 in 2020 due to long supplies,” said Tan Yi Ling, principal analyst of polyolefin­s at IHS Markit based in Singapore. In January the spread was about US$542, Tan said.

Southeaste­rn comfort?

The year-long, tit-for-tat trade dispute between Washington and Beijing has roiled financial markets and cast a long shadow over the global economy.

China exported 12 million tonnes of its plastic endproduct­s worldwide in 2018, 3 million tonnes of which went to the United States, said Wood Mackenzie’s Chitalia.

But these plastics exports to the United States are now hit by tariffs, the analyst said, pushing some petrochemi­cal companies to look for customers in new regions.

Shin Hak Cheol, chief executive of South Korea’s LG Chem, told reporters in July that South Korea’s top chemical maker plans to tap markets in areas such as Southeast Asia to offset easing demand from plastics makers in China.

“The trade dispute between the US and China is not expected to end in the short term,” he said.

“Additional­ly, South Korean petrochemi­cal makers expanded their facilities five years ago during a peak time in the petrochemi­cal cycle, and some of those increased supplies have hit the market and will keep coming to the market in 2020.”

In the petrochemi­cals trade it typically takes four to five years from initial investment­s to startup of commercial operation.

Meanwhile, Malaysia’s state energy firm Petronas is expected to start up a 1.2 million tonnesper-year ethylene facility in the south of the country later this year, looking to supply local markets.

“These new capacities illustrate the new paradigm confrontin­g petchem (petrochemi­cal) producers,” said Paul Hodges of The pH Report, part of consultanc­y firm Internatio­nal eChem.

“Low-cost supply is no longer the key to success ... Sustainabi­lity is replacing globalisat­ion as the key driver for the industry.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? Gas flares at a Refinery and Petrochemi­cal Integrated Developmen­t oil refinery at Pengerang Integrated Petroleum Complex in Pengerang. — Reuters photo
Gas flares at a Refinery and Petrochemi­cal Integrated Developmen­t oil refinery at Pengerang Integrated Petroleum Complex in Pengerang. — Reuters photo

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