| New capacity additions, expansions, mergers and acquisitions in the  polymer and plastics industry in 2016 have been summarised:
 * The Rs.10,000 crore gas cracker project -  Brahmaputra Crackers and Polymers Ltd. at Lepetkata in Upper Assam’s Dibrugarh  district commenced production in India. GAIL  is the main promoter with 70% stake, while Assam government, Oil India Ltd and  Numaligarh Refinery have 10%t stake each in the company. Capacity will comprise  2,20,000 tpa of polyethylene and 60,000 tpa of polypropylene.
 * South Korea's Hyundai Chemical, a joint venture between Hyundai  Oilbank Co and Lotte Chemical, completed  building a US$1.02 bln condensate splitter to  produce mixed xylene and light naphtha. The 130,000 bpd condensate splitter in  Daesan on the country's west coast will churn out 1.2 mln tpa of mixed-xylene  and 1 mln tpa of light naphtha.
 * The petrochemicals complex of Egyptian Ethylene and Derivatives Company  (ETHYDCO) was unveiled in Alexandria in mid-August with a total investment of  US$1.9 bln. The complex is set to operate with the capacity of 460,000 tons of  ethylene, 400,000 tons of polyethylene divided into two production lines, a 200,000  tpa LLDPE/HDPE swing line, a 200,000 tpa HDPE line, and 20,000 tons of  butadiene.
 * The largest petrochemical plant in Latin  America began operating in Nanchital, Veracruz. The US $5.2 bln joint venture  project of petrochemical companies Grupo IDESA of Mexico and Braskem of Brazil,  Proyecto Etileno XXI, will address a shortfall in the domestic supply of  polyethylene.
 * South Korea’s SK Advanced, a subsidiary of SK Gas, embarked on the production  of propylene at its newly built factory in Korea in a bid to meet the  burgeoning demand for propylene in China. SK Advanced is a joint venture  between SK Gas Ltd. (45%), Saudi Arabia’s Advanced Petrochemical Co. (30%) and  Kuwait’s Petrochemical Industries Co. (25%). The Ulsan facility is projected to  produce 600,000 tpa of propylene.
 * The Chatterjee Group (TCG) led by New York-based investor Purnendu Chatterjee  signed an agreement to acquire a 90% stake in Mitsubishi Chemical Corp.’s  Indian subsidiary, MCC PTA India Corp. Pvt. Ltd, for an estimated US$48 mln.  This sale is in line with Mitsubishi Chemicals' decision to scale back its  investments in commodity chemicals such as PTA to focus on other businesses.
 * Indorama Ventures Public Company Limited announced acquisition of BP's  petrochemical plant at Decautur, which will be renamed Indorama Ventures  Xylenes & PTA LLC, for an undisclosed amount. The complex has capacity to  produce 1 mln tpa of purified terephthalic acid (PTA).
 * German chemical company Lanxess plans to buy US based  Chemtura Corp. for US$2.7 bln,  a deal that should help it  expand beyond its synthetic rubber business. Lanxess said the acquisition,  its largest ever, would expand its activities in additives for lubricants and  flame retardants and strengthen business in North America.
 * Sumitomo Chemical will begin production of polypropylene  compounds for makers of home appliances and automotive parts in India . The  annual capacity is planned at 5,000 tons at a Chennai facility at an investment  outlay of approximately US$5-10 million.
 *Specialty chemicals company LANXESS has started  up a second production line for plastics compounding at its Gastonia, NC  facility. The new line represents an investment of about US$15 mln and doubles  the site’s capacity. It will produces the Durethan (polyamides) and Pocan  (polybutylene terephthalates), which are used primarily in the automotive  industry to manufacture lighter-weight plastic components that can replace  metal parts in vehicles.
 * Polyplastics Co., Ltd. has decided to expand its engineering plastics  compound plant in Malaysia operated by Polyplastics Asia Pacific Sdn. Bhd. (PAP),  a wholly owned local subsidiary headquartered in Kuala Lumpur. Additional  production capacity of 9,000 tpa will be added at the plant in Kuantan, Pahang  State, increasing total capacity to 35,000 tpa.
 *Indorama Ventures Ltd. (IVL) acquired a  majority stake in Dhunseri Petrochem. IVL is a Bangkok-based polyester producer  founded by Indian-origin businessman Aloke Lohia.
 * Teknor Apex Company acquired Plastic-Technologie-Service (PTS), a  German-based custom compounder of thermoplastic elastomers (TPEs) and  engineering thermoplastics (ETPs). PTS operates a state of the art  manufacturing plant at Steinsfeld, Germany with more than 20,000 tons of  installed capacity, as well as a technical support facility.
 * RadiciGroup Performance Plastics signed an agreement for the purchase  of the Engineering Polymer Solutions business of the American company INVISTA  to further strengthen and expand its presence in both the American and European  markets.
 * Mexichem has acquired Vinyl Compounds Holdings Ltd. (VCHL), a leading  U.K.based technical PVC compounds manufacturer serving a broad range of  industries including: building and construction, pipe and profile  manufacturers, footwear and consumer goods.
 Petrochemical Industry Outlook in largest growing regions of the  world as  per Business Monitor International (BMI)China: The decline in the value of the yuan, as well as market tightening in  some segments, has benefited the Chinese petrochemicals industry, which has  struggled with competitiveness. The result of rising domestic production will  be a cut in imports and, in segments such as polyvinyl chloride (PVC) where  China produces a surplus, rising basic polymers exports. This is our core  scenario over the short term, and one that will lead to a glut in Asian  petrochemicals supply that should be felt in 2017. However, with naphtha and  ethane at a low price, in the long term the drive towards coal- and  methanol-based chemicals will put the industry at a disadvantage.
 Chinese petrochemicals output gathered pace in the first 8 months of 2016, with  ethylene output up 6.6% y-o-y to 13.9 mln tons and primary plastic production  rising 7.9% y-o-y to 66.4 mln tons. Plastic product volumes grew 5.2% y-o-y to  65.2 mln tons. Although petrochemicals output is rising, capacity utilisation  for coal-based polyethylene producers was estimated at 65-70% in 2016, down  from over 80% in 2015, while China's polypropylene (PP) operating rate was  around 75% due to tighter supplies.
 Petrochemicals-consuming sectors such as construction are in the weakest  position. China's construction sector will continue to see a structural  slowdown as the country shifts from an unsustainable investment driven model,  to one that is more consumption-led. BMI forecasts China's construction sector  to grow by an annual average of 4.2% between 2016 and 2025 in real terms, a  significant slowdown from the 11.6% registered between 2006 and 2015. This will  depress demand growth for a range of polymers used in the construction market,  particularly PVC and polymer piping.
 India: 
    Project delays and sluggish industrial performance have undermined  petrochemicals growth in India, as per BMI. However, the long-term outlook  remains positive, even with reduction in BMI forecast for consumption growth.  Low naphtha prices, a surplus of feedstock availability and a lack of self-sufficiency  provide the basis for import substitution. The main issue is greater clarity on  the government's regulatory framework for petrochemicals clusters, as well as  reducing red tape that has bound up environmental approvals and land  acquisitions. The Indian petrochemicals industry was adversely affected by an  industrial downturn brought on by China's surplus industrial capacity. In the  first 7 months of 2016, chemicals output grew by an average 2.2% and rubber and  plastic was up 1.2%. Production indices suggest that in spite of capacity  growth with newly opened plants such as BrahmaputraGas Cracker  and Polymer, India's petrochemicals industry has yet to see any  rise in output volumes.Growth rates may have been higher had project targets been met in 2016. Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL)'s Kochi Refinery in Kochi,  Kerala was due to be expanded to 310,000 bpd from the current 190,000 bpd in  May, but was pushed back to possibly Q4-16. Propylene and ethylene, used as raw  materials in the production of synthetic textiles, would be among the  petrochemicals that would be produced at the proposed petrochemicals complex,  which it aims to open in 2018. JBF is building a 1.25 mln tpa PTA unit at  the Mangalore SEZ, which will supply downstream PET producers. It signed an  agreement with BP for  PTA technology licensing. The complex was due to come on stream in H1-16, a  year behind schedule, but by Q3-16 was yet to be completed. BMI continues to believe that growth will  strengthen in 2016 and beyond, with per capita petrochemicals consumption  doubling in 2015-2020 and output growth set to reach 10% pa.
     Ambit Capital, a Mumbai-based equity research firm, has officially  estimated that the demonetisation-driven cash crunch will result in India's GDP  growth crashing to 0.5% in H2 of financial year 2016-17. This means the GDP  growth for six months, from October 2016 to March 2017, could decelerate to  0.5%, down from 6.4% in the previous six months. Further, it is estimated that  during the October to December quarter- the GDP growth may contract, thus  showing negative growth. However, Ambit is hopeful that a strong formalisation  of the informal economy will ensue through 2017 until 2019 and this disruption  could also crimp GDP growth in 2017-18 to 5.8 % from their earlier estimate of  7.3%. Demonetisation is expected  to have long term impact on a number of sectors including automobiles, FMCG and  a other businesses that thrive on cash. This in turn will impact the Indian  polymer and plastics industry. Amid the expectations of “feel-good” factor, India's  Union Budget 2017-18 is expected to be different from the previous ones with a series  of populist policies. We move into the New  Year amid high expectations of a  desire by the government to create a positive feeling for the future so as to  boost domestic and international investor confidence.Global economic growth remained soft in 2016 amid economic and geo  political reasons such as Brexit, a coup d’état in Turkey, the ongoing civil  war in Syria, potential policy changes in USA after the presidential elections,  topped by demonetization announced in India in November. IMF has predicted global  growth is projected to slow to 3.1% in 2016. The  World Bank is revising its 2016 global economic growth forecast down to 2.4%  from the 2.9% pace projected in January. World Bank has raised its 2017  forecast for crude oil prices to US$55 per barrel as members of the OPEC  prepare to limit production after a long period of unrestrained output. Whether  the rise is sustained will depend on how strictly OPEC members abide by the  agreement, something they have not always done in the past. but what if US  shale gas output increases and hampers the price rally?
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