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Pandemic exposes cracks in oil majors’ bet on plastic

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SINGAPORE: The energy industry’s bet that a petrochemi­cals boom would support decades of oil and gas sales growth is on shaky ground as an already saturated plastic market is hit by a coronaviru­s demand shock.

While soaring demand for personal protective equipment and takeaway food containers has boosted sales of some plastics, it is likely to be only a temporary spike, say analysts.

In the longer term, a virus-led hit to economic growth in Asian, African and Latin American markets threatens demand at a time when the industry is already facing bans on single-use plastic that are spreading across the world.

Plastic resin prices, which have been declining over the past two years, have plunged further since the coronaviru­s hit, an added challenge for investment­s of hundreds of billions of dollars in petrochemi­cal capacity over the past decade.

“The petrochemi­cals world has been hit by a double whammy,” said Utpal Sheth, Executive Director, Chemical and Plastics Insights at data firm IHS Markit.

“Capital investment has been slashed by all companies. This will delay the projects under constructi­on and new projects.”

Dow Inc said in April it would idle three US plants producing polyethyle­ne, the base for plastic bags and bottles.

Thailand’s PTT and South Korean partner Daelim have indefinite­ly delayed an investment decision on a Us$5.7bil project in Ohio, three industry sources said. The companies did not respond to request for comment.

A massive Pennsylvan­ia plastics project, owned by Shell, that President Donald Trump touted during a visit last year faces risks of oversupply and a low price outlook, an energy industry report said yesterday.

Dow and oil majors Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell , Chevron and BP declined to comment on demand forecasts for this story. Still, there are 176 new petrochemi­cal plants planned for the next five years, with nearly 80% of those in Asia, according to energy consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie.

Many plants under constructi­on or late in the planning stages can’t be rolled back without incurring massive losses.

Exxon in April kicked off constructi­on on a Us$10bil project in China, while Shell and state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corp last month approved the expansion of one of the country’s biggest ever petrochemi­cal complexes.

Chinese firms are reviving a Us$20bil project in eastern Shandong province to help support a flagging economy, Reuters exclusivel­y reported this week.

“Even before the coronaviru­s outbreak, we were already expecting to see various petrochemi­cal value chains ... heading into an oversupply situation,” said Catherine Tan, principle analyst at Wood Mackenzie.

Significan­tly reducing the wave of new capacity would take years, raising the chances of a prolonged plastic price slump, industry sources said.

Environmen­t fears

As they come under financial strain, some plastic producers have requested rescue funds from government­s, while industry groups have lobbied lawmakers to roll back bans on single-use plastic, arguing it protects people from disease and germs.

The US Plastic Industry Associatio­n wrote a letter in March to the US Department of Health calling for a reversal of plastic bag bans, arguing that single-use plastic was the safest way to transport and package food.

However, a New England Medical Journal study in March found the coronaviru­s was still detected on plastic after 72 hours, compared with up to 24 hours on cardboard and copper.

With the price for virgin, or non-recycled, plastic now at historic lows and oil demand withered, environmen­talists fear that producers will pump out cheap plastic to stoke demand and soak up some of the global glut of cheap oil and gas.

Plastic waste is already piling up in parts of Asia as people use more disposable packaging under coronaviru­s lockdowns, and recyclers struggle to operate.

“We will see a flood of plastic waste. Even if that wave isn’t sustained, the plastic that gets pushed out now will pollute the planet for decades,” said Carroll Muffett, head of the Center for Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Law, an NGO.

 ?? — AP ?? Too much garbage: Workers prepare plastic waste to be recycled inside the Alexis Plastics factory in Ecatepec, Mexico. Plastic waste is already piling up in parts of Asia as people use more disposable packaging under coronaviru­s lockdowns, and recyclers struggle to operate.
— AP Too much garbage: Workers prepare plastic waste to be recycled inside the Alexis Plastics factory in Ecatepec, Mexico. Plastic waste is already piling up in parts of Asia as people use more disposable packaging under coronaviru­s lockdowns, and recyclers struggle to operate.

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