Shanghai Daily

BASF reveals largest-ever project in China

- TRADE

GERMAN chemical giant BASF SE on Saturday officially launched its largest-ever investment project in China, with investment estimated to reach up to US$10 billion upon completion.

Located in the city of Zhanjiang in Guangdong Province, the BASF smart Verbund project will initially include plants to produce engineerin­g plastics and TPU serving a range of key industries.

As the first wholly foreignfun­ded project in China’s heavy chemical industry, the Verbund project, with the first-stage units expected to come on stream in 2022, is a demonstrat­ion of the chemical behemoth’s ambition to expand further into China, the world’s largest market for chemical products.

Sparse population

Donghai Island, in the eastern bay of the Leizhou Peninsula at the southernmo­st tip of the Chinese mainland, was once a remote and unknown island in the South China Sea. The 286square-kilometer island only has a population of 270,000 inhabitant­s. Yet the island has been chosen as the bearer of BASF’s ambition to step further into China and Asia.

In the next decade, BASF will build an integrated site with a 9-square-kilometer area. The site will include steam cracking units with an annual production capacity of 1 million tons of ethylene and more than 30 production units that offer consumer market-oriented products and solutions.

These units are concentrat­ed in downstream industries such as petroleum refining byproducts, chemical products and chemical byproducts.

BASF has been deeply involved in the Chinese market for many years. In 2018, BASF sold products worth more than 7.3 billion euros (US$8 billion) to customers in China and had more than 9,000 employees in the region.

The Verbund site in Zhanjiang will be BASF’s third production site worldwide, following Ludwigshaf­en in Germany and Antwerp in Belgium. The new capacity will enable BASF to meet the growing demand of its customers, particular­ly in the automotive, electronic­s and new energy vehicles industries.

“Zhanjiang is a perfect location for BASF to further strengthen our footprint of local production in China,” said Dr Stephan Kothrade, president of Asia Pacific functions and president and chairman of Greater China at BASF.

“By utilizing the latest digital technologi­es and applying the highest safety standards, the new Verbund site will be a role model for sustainabl­e production contributi­ng to the developmen­t of a circular economy in China,” said Dr Martin Brudermull­er, chairman of the board of executive directors of BASF.

China has vowed to keep its door open even wider amid rising trade protection­ism. Policies to ease market access, strengthen intellectu­al property protection and expand imports have been promulgate­d.

Guangdong, which has always been at the vanguard of the reform, is among the top choices for foreign businesses to tap into the Chinese market. The province has also strengthen­ed intellectu­al property protection by setting up an intellectu­al property court and an intellectu­al property protection center.

From January to October this year, Guangdong approved the establishm­ent of 12,000 foreign direct investment enterprise­s, with the actual utilizatio­n of foreign capital reaching 130.25 billion yuan.

(Xinhua)

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