| Butadiene (1,3-butadiene)  is a colorless gas that is condensed to liquid just below minus 4.0°C and is  highly reactive. It is soluble in alcohol and ether but insoluble in water, and  is polymerized easily in the presence of oxygen. It is obtained as a byproduct  of the manufacture of ethylene and propylene by selective distillation of cracked naphtha or gas oil  stream. Butadiene is an important feedstock to manufacture chemicals and  materials that further serve diverse industries including automotive, paints, textile,  appliance manufacturing and others. Its main application segments  include Styrene-Butadiene  Rubber SBR, Polybutadiene Rubber (PBR), Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene Resins  (ABS), Styrene Butadiene Latex (SB Latex), Adiponitrile, and Nitrile Rubber  (NR).Butadiene has been indispensable for a range of  important industrial and consumer products for decades. Even though mostly invisible  to the eye of the consumer, this preliminary product of the petrochemical  industry can be found in computers, carpets and various rubbers. Its use in tyres  causes butadiene to be a basic product for the growing transportation industry.  In 2012, however, indications multiplied that demand for butadiene declines due  to slow economic development in downstream industries, the production of tyres  in particular. This was reflected in the price for butadiene, which fell  considerably in all regions since the end of 2012. According to analysts at  Ceresana, this slowdown will only be temporary; the market for butadiene is  expected to grow again in the future. In 2020, approx. 13.7 mln tons of  butadiene will be processed by downstream industries. More than half of total  demand for butadiene is generated by producers of styrene-butadiene rubber  (SBR) and polybutadiene (BR). Almost 70% of these products are processed by the  tyre industry. Another important application is the engineering plastic acrylonitrile  butadiene styrene (ABS), which is used in, for example, vehicle parts and  casings for office equipment such as computers. Latex based on butadiene is  utilized for carpets and paper coatings. Asia-Pacific has for some time now  been the major consumer of butadiene and increased its share of the global  market to more than 50%. This region is expected to continue to grow,  development in individual countries, however, is likely to be heterogenous:  China is projected to experience dynamic development, even though growth rates  will not be as high as they had been in the past. The highest growth rate of  more than 16% p.a. Ceresana forecasts for India, due to the rapidly growing  processing industry in this country. Already saturated markets such as South Korea  and Japan, on the other hand, are anticipated to generate only moderate growth  rates. Until now, butadiene was mainly obtained as a by-product of ethylene  production. Depending on the raw material used, the quantity of butadiene  produced in steam crackers varies. In comparison to the crude oil-based  naphtha, natural gas-based ethane contains little C4, causing butadiene yields  in ethane production to be low. This  is reflected in the USA, where innovative fracking technology has led to shale gas being increasingly  used as feedstock. As a result, production volume of butadiene fell. Thus,  relative availability of feedstocks influences production potential of  butadiene. Low butadiene yields of shale gas are expected to be overcompensated  by an innovative method based on butane dehydrogenation. In the course of the  creation of additional  ethylene capacities, production capacity of butadiene increased  considerably over the past years as well. Additional capacities met an  increasing demand, which only slowed during the global economic crisis in 2008-2009  and reached a new maximum in 2012. In the future, the larger part of new  capacities will be created in Asia-Pacific that also is likely to see the  highest increase of demand. Ceresana does not foresee surplus capacities or  continuing price erosion of butadiene on the medium- and long-term.
 As per Research and Markets, this market has grown considerably during the past  few years and is expected to grow at a rapid pace in the next five years,  driven by growing demand in the Asia-Pacific region. Asia-Pacific is the  biggest consumer of butadiene, followed by Europe and North America, which  consumed more than half of the total global demand in 2012. China is the  biggest consumer of butadiene, and is also among the fastest growing markets  with a CAGR of about 6.2% from 2013 to 2018. The European and North American  markets are comparatively mature with a demand growth well below the average  market growth. Asia-Pacific is the world's largest market of  butadiene, which consumed more than half of the total global demand, and also  for most of its derivatives that includes styrene butadiene rubber (SBR),  polybutadiene rubber (PBR), acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), and nitrile  rubber (NR). Various countries in Asia-Pacific are ahead of them all to implement  butadiene and its downstream derivatives in a diverse range of applications.  Demand growth of butadiene in the region is projected to be well above the  average growth rate of the market. China and South Korea are  the biggest consumers of butadiene in the region while India and China are  expected to be the fastest growing Butadiene Market. A few of the reasons  for the high level growth in this region are growing population, vast  economies-developed as well as developing, and favorable investment policies  and government initiatives to promote industrial growth. The budding nature of  the economies and rising consumption trends for various materials such as  synthetic rubbers and ABS resin drives the demand of butadiene at a significant  pace in the region.
 
 As per marketsandmarkets.com, butadiene is a major feedstock to manufacture  SBR, with just less than one third of its total global demand being consumed to  manufacture SBR. Butadiene demand by SBR manufacturers is quite high in USA, followed by China, South Korea  and Japan.  Subsequently, PBR manufacturers were the second largest consumers of butadiene  with a butadiene consumption share difference of 2.4%, compared to SBR  manufacturers. The PBR manufacturing segment is also the fastest growing  end-use segment with an expected CAGR of about 4.9% from 2013 to 2018.  Butadiene is majorly consumed by PBR manufacturers in countries that include China,  U.S., South  Korea, Japan, Russia, etc. Growth of the SBR & PBR market is  largely associated with the growth in the automotive industry globally. The  automotive industry is expected to push the tire industry to new heights, which  in turn will help the styrene butadiene rubber and polybutadiene rubber market  achieve greater volumes and revenues in the near future; hence this drives the demand  for butadiene at a significant pace.
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