| An interesting development in this  market has occurred in North America due to the rapid pace of shale gas  production where considerable amounts of natural gas from shale and other  unconventional sources are being produced, together with accompanying natural gases  such as ethane and propane, as per a report by Companies & Market Research. These supplementary  natural gas liquids (NGLs) are lowering available North American propylene  supplies and in turn reducing the competitiveness of the ethylene chain. As the  supply of propylene in North America tightens the propylene industry is  witnessing a change in the feedstock dynamics elsewhere in the world. The  cracking of light feedstocks produces significantly less propylene co-product  than the cracking of heavy liquids. As a result, propylene production from ethylene  crackers has declined in the United States, driving propylene prices higher  than ethylene prices for the first time in decades. This trend in increasing  propylene pricing is expected to continue in the foreseeable future due to  rising demand in propylene and ever increasing availability of lighter  feedstock volumes becoming available from shale gas deposits. In China and  Europe the high price of crude oil is also discouraging the use of naphtha. To  address the changing feedstock dynamics and deal with the high price of crude  some operators are embracing on-purpose propylene technologies that are able to  produce high quantities of propylene by using alternative feedstocks such as  coal and natural gas liquids. Proliferation of such technologies has been witnessed  in the Asia-Pacific and North American regions. For example in Asia-Pacific,  over 50% of new capacity will be achieved by on-purpose technologies. In North  America, 100% of the new capacity is expected to come from developments in this  area. As the demand for propylene increases and uncertainty in its supply  becomes even more of a challenge, the use of on-purpose technology is  anticipated to rise in the future. Global propylene production  capacity will increase to 165 mln tpa by 2030 from current levels of 109 mln  tpa, triggering a radical shift in historical supply relationships, as per oil  and gas analyst Wood Mackenzie Ltd. While propylene traditionally has been a by-product  of both ethylene from steam crackers or refined fuel products from oil  refineries, these sources have not been able to keep up pace in recent years  with global demand growth.  The US$120 bln global propylene  market has regularly been in a shortage situation over the past few years, leading  to high prices, and therefore, a loss of market share relative to competing  materials, as per Stephen Zinger, head of WoodMac's chemical research for the  Americas. These supply shortfalls have been particularly acute in China, where  demand growth exceeds investments in traditional sources of propylene, and in  North America, where the shift to shale gas-based ethane feedstocks have  reduced propylene yields from steam crackers. These supply shortages from steam  crackers and refineries have triggered substantial investments into alternative  technologies to boost global propylene supplies, including methanol-to-olefins(MTO), methanol-to-propylene (MTP) and propane dehydrogenation  (PDH). These investment will, over the next five years, not only create  near-term threats of oversupply in China and North America, but will also permanently  alter the paradigm of propylene’s global supply and market pricing dynamics.
  The wide adoption of PDH  technology is likely to happen in North America, where ample supplies of  domestic shale gas are adding downward pressure to the cost of propane used as  feedstock for PDH units. In addition to other new PDH units, and expansions  under consideration by C3 Petrochemicals (Ascend), Formosa Plastics,  Petrologistics, REXtac, Williams Energy Canada; Dow Chemical Co. and Enterprise  Products Partners LP each are spending more than US$1 bln to construct and  start up new PDH units by early 2016, as per ogjonline.com.  Following start-up of the first two new PDH  units, North American propylene prices are likely to start on a downward trend as  the market becomes saturated with supplies, according to Zinger. WoodMac  expects this trend to dramatically change after the start-up of these new PDH  units and several new propane export terminals, causing propane prices to rise  and the spread between propylene and propane to return closer to historical  levels. From between 2005 and 2030, the market share of PDH and MTO-MTP-sourced  propylene will increase from nonexistent to more than 25% of total North  American supply, representing a permanent change in the paradigm of marginal  propylene supplies to the market.
 As the  largest importer of propylene and propylene-derivative chemicals currently,  China is seeking to adopt a long-term propylene self-sufficiency strategy with  a focus on PDH investments, which began with Tianjin Bohai Chemical Industry  Co.'s commissioning of the first PDH unit in late 2013. In addition to four new  PDH units scheduled to start production this year, almost a dozen additional  PDH plants in China are currently under investment consideration. But China's  plan for propylene self-sufficiency also includes investments in MTO and MTP  technologies, which will capitalize on the country's vast coal reserves,  according to Vince Sinclair, head of Asia chemicals research for WoodMac. China  is expected to add 12 more MTO plants in operation, with dozens more still  under investment consideration. Propylene prices in Asia already have started  to weaken as a result of these new domestic supply investments in China. Between  2005 and 2030, the market share of propylene sourced from PDH and MTO-MTP  technologies will increase to about 45% of China total capacity, pushing the  country toward full self-sufficiency and negatively impacting export-oriented  producers in South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Singapore and India, which  currently serve as China's largest sources of propylene-derivative imports. Another  driver behind the wave of investments in China's on-purpose propylene capacity  is a strategy on the part of independent propylene-derivative manufacturers to  reduce their dependence on imports and domestic supply from the oligopoly of  state-owned majors. As per ICIS,  increased capacities of at least 1.5 mln tpa of propylene are expected to come  on stream in the key market of China. 3 PDH plants, located in east China are scheduled to begin operations in H1-2014, more than  tripling China's existing 600,000 tpa propane-based propylene capacity. Most of  the units will be supplying propylene feedstock to their downstream affiliates  which are currently major importers. That means these end-users will be less  reliant on imported propylene next year. Start  up by polypropylene(PP) producer Shaoxing  Sanyuan Petrochemical's 450,000 tpa  PDH unit in Shaoxing, Zhejiang province, has been followed by acrylic acid  producer Zhejiang Satellite Energy Co's  450,000 tpa PDH unit in Pinghu, Zhejiang  province. The biggest impact on east China's demand-supply balance is likely to  be the start-up of Ningbo Haiyue New Materials Co's 600,000 pa PDH unit, as the company  does not have any  derivative operations yet and all its propylene supply will be sold to the  domestic market.
 While North America and China are addressing their  propylene shortfalls with alternative technologies and feedstocks, it is  forecast that Europe will solve imbalances to its propylene supply with  additional imports. "European crackers are shifting to lighter feeds where  possible as evident by the announced intentions to import ethane from the US by  Ineos, SABIC, and Borealis, while others continue to study similar options explains Alex Lidback, WoodMac's head of chemical research for Europe, the  Middle East and Africa. He added that currently there are two PDH units in  Europe, but all indications are that new PDH and MTO-MTP investments are not  viable options.
 
 On-purpose technologies have risen in importance as the costs of heavy  feedstock used in steam crackers and Fluid Catalytic Crackers (FCC) have  increased substantially, driven by crude oil price increases, as per Market  Research Reports. These two sources account for the largest shares of propylene  production, but high costs have deterred producers from using heavy feedstocks  in steam crackers. In regions where ethane feedstock provides a much cheaper  alternative to heavy feedstock for steam crackers, the propylene industry is  likely to suffer, as light feedstock produce negligible quantity of propylene.  In FCCs, increases in gasoline price drive producers to use chemical grade  propylene for octane blending, rather than selling it to be made into  polymer-grade propylene. These difficult operating conditions have encouraged  producers to use on-purpose technologies to manufacture propylene as main  product, with lower-cost feedstocks. The most popular on-purpose technologies  are Propane Dehydrogenation (PDH), Olefin metathesis and Methanol to  Olefins/Propylene (MTP). In the Middle East, plants based on these technologies  already account for more than one-third of propylene capacity, while in  Asia-Pacific, North America and Europe, the number of plants based on these  technologies is increasing slowly. According to Publisher forecasts, plants  based on on-purpose technologies are forecast to account for 63.1% of capacity  expansion globally over the next five years. China will lead the global  propylene industry over the next five years, with the largest consumption and  production increases. With a rapidly industrializing and urbanizing economy,  automotive, packaging, electronic sectors have grown at a fast pace in China.  The economic growth is expected to continue for the next five years, albeit at  a slower pace than in recent years, and propylene demand is also expected to  increase. China will expand its propylene capacity at the fastest pace of  any country over the next five years, forecasted to account for 68% of the  Asian capacity addition and 45% of the global capacity addition over the next  five years.
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