Uncertainty could tighten chemical markets, says IHS VP
Concerns around volatile energy and economic scenarios appears to have caused a collective pause in new chemical industry investment, said Mark Eramo, vice president with IHS Chemical. That delay could tighten markets during the next few years.
Familiar patterns in energy markets and the global economy between 2009 and 2014 have been upset. During that period, energy and feedstock markets were characterized by high crude prices globally and lower U.S. natural gas prices as a result of shale. The economy, meanwhile, was defined by strong growth in the developing world led by the “BRIC” countries–Brazil, Russia, India, China.
“Today, those paradigms have been shattered,” Eramo said. “Crude oil prices have fallen sharply. India’s economy is still growing strongly, but Russia and Brazil struggle with recession and China’s economy is undergoing a number of changes, the full impact of which are still unknown, Eramo adds. “Energy and economic forecasts are two basic pillars that drive decisions about how and where I’m going to invest if I’m running a chemical company,” Eramo said. “They’ve changed, and a reassessment of capital spending is underway.”
Basic chemical capacity additions will continue to be dominated by China, but its pace will moderate during the next 10 years. The United States will see the second-largest build up of basic chemical capacity between 2015 and 2025 in a shale-driven resurgence. Low-cost feedstocks are bringing back methanol and ethylene capacity into the United States, while China is adding significant chlorine, methanol, and propylene capacity through 2025. The Middle East will continue to add capacity, but expansions have levelled off after a surge in the 2000s. India will also add significant capacity, while Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam will join the top-10 ranking of countries adding basic chemicals capacity.
IHS Chemical forecasts that demand for basic chemicals–ethylene, propylene, methanol, benzene, para-xylene, and chlorine — will grow 4%/year through 2020. Ethylene, propylene, and methanol are expected to grow at faster-than-GDP rates with more modest growth forecast for benzene, chlorine, and para-xylene.