| As the largest global market for ethylene derivatives and a  rapidly industrialising economy, the standard expectations are for China to  move towards greater self sufficiency, However, China’s self sufficiency is  projected to peak in 2018 and then decline. This reflects the growing pre-eminence of gas-based feedstocks for ethylene  production in locations such as the US, which will see them become leading  sources of new ethylene supply though to 2030. Consistently dominant Middle East supply plus a  new wave forecast to come from Russia and the Caspian will add to US exports to create tougher  competition for Asian producers.    Wood Mackenzie says that China is and will  remain the overwhelming contributor to ethylene equivalent demand growth. Mr Vince  Sinclair, Head of Asia Pacific Petrochemicals Research says, "China is  already a maturing ethylene  market so year-on-year growth will not be large on a percentage  basis.  However this still translates into 2 mln tpa of ethylene  equivalent growth and China will still make up close to 50% of the 90 mt world  growth in ethylene equivalent demand from 2014-2030. For a developing economy  the size of China, a fast pace of capacity build may be expected to keep up  with demand and reduce import reliance. However, China will see ethylene  equivalent self-sufficiency peak at around 50% in 2018, before declining below  45% by 2030. It will be one of the primary target markets for new ethylene  equivalent export supply, with imports of ethylene equivalent forecast to  double by 2030 to over 40 mt. We see this as a consequence of Chinese National  Oil Companies (NOCs) hesitance in investing in ethylene capacity with high  capital spend plus resistance to industrial projects based on increasingly vocal environmental concerns.  Despite more cautious NOC investment, domestic production growth will continue  to increase, but from a more diverse range of ethylene feedstocks. Meanwhile, a  steady increase in export-oriented supply from the US has occurred due to the shale gas discovery in North America.  Additionally, other advantaged  feedstock locations including the Middle East and Russia will act to  further discourage NOCs from making investment decisions in expensive cracker  projects. Sinclair puts expected US exports to China into context, "The US  will more than double its exports of ethylene equivalent from now to 2030. By  then, it will have increased exports of ethylene in just the major derivatives  to around 17 million tons. This level of surge in exports will be reminiscent  of the surge of Middle East exports to China in 2008-2011. The Middle East will  retain top spot as the largest supplier of ethylene derivatives to China  through to 2030, accounting for up to 40% of world trade. A third, albeit  smaller wave of competitive export supply is also expected to develop in Russia  and the Caspian, as it leverages its local hydrocarbon abundance."
 
 Developments in the China coal chemistry sector will counter some of the  impacts of additional ethylene derivative imports into China from other  regions, beginning with the success of China's first Coal-To-Olefins (CTO) plant by the Shenhua  Group in Baotou, Inner Mongolia. The local coal and petrochemical industries  have been actively seeking similar investment opportunities due to the  abundance of cheap domestic coal resources in China. Although there has been a  lot of excitement around coal-based  ethylene projects in China, limitations on water resources and the  threat of environmental pollution will dampen the rate of capacity build-up  well below what has been announced to the public sector. As much as 11 million  tons of coal/methanol-based  capacity has been announced from 2013 to 2020 but only a few projects  totalling 3.7 mln tons of ethylene received National Development and Reform  Commission (NDRC) approval as of end-2013.
 Sinclair concluded, "although coal based chemistry will  increase in China, it will not be enough to materially increase the self  sufficiency of the country. Current and future developments in advantaged  feedstock in other parts of the world will have an impact not just on how  export availability will develop until 2020, it will go beyond to impact global  trade and the competitiveness of the Chinese market through to 2030.  Ultimately, the pace of investments in new naphtha based Chinese steam crackers  will be adversely impacted; thus reducing the country’s ability to satisfy its  own demand growth. With China remaining central to the global demand picture,  highly advantaged supplier such as the US and Middle East will see increased  opportunities within China. This translates to stiffer competition for other  Asian producers targeting the Chinese market."
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