South Korea's LG Chem said on Tuesday it had decided to drop a plan to jointly build a $4.2-billion petrochemical complex in Kazakhstan, citing a prolonged slump in oil prices and a sharp increase in facility investments, as per economictimes.com. In 2011, the chemical company said it would construct the complex near the western Kazakh city of Atyrau as part of a 50-50 joint venture with two Kazakh companies. The plan involved building ethylene and polyethylene plants with annual capacities of 840,000 tons and 800,000 tons, respectively. LG Chem also said it had cancelled its plan to invest in the polysilicon business, citing difficult prospects for a market turnaround in the short term. In 2011, the company said it would build a 5,000 tpa plant, at a cost of 491 bln won (US$408 mln), to manufacture polysilicon, which is used to make solar panels
{{comment.DateTimeStampDisplay}}
{{comment.Comments}}