Ethylene capacity in Asia is set to climb 11% to 28 million tons in 2007.
Shell, Europe 's largest oil company commissioned
a US$4.3 billion petrochemical complex with a
800,000 ton ethylene plant in China. The company
pend several billion U.S. dollars building a petrochemical
complex in Singapore, at the heart of which is
a cracker capable of producing 800,000 tons of
ethylene.
Exxon Mobil, the world's biggest investor-owned oil company, may be building a second cracker in Singapore in near future.
Saudi Aramco, the world's largest oil company, plans to build US$3.5 billion refining and chemicals venture with Exxon Mobil and China Petroleum and Chemical in Fujian province.
Early in 2007, Taiwan 's Formosa Petrochemical Corp. will also be opening its largest plant in Asia .
China Petroleum and Chemical Corp. and PetroChina Co., the country's biggest oil companies, have plans to set up as many as 12 crackers between 2007 and 2011, each with capacity of about 1 million ton.
South Korea's SK Corp. has restarted its 650,000
ton cracker and Japan 's Idemitsu Kosan Co. has
reopened its 600,000 ton cracker in September
after a one month maintenance shutdown. Tonen
General Sekiyu K. K., the Japanese refining unit
of Exxon Mobil Corp., a cracker capable of making
half a million tonne of ethylene is scheduled
to resume operations in mid-September.
The planned expansion of Middle Eastern petrochemical
production - he region's largest expansion to
date, will also have a major impact on the Asian
petrochemical industry. This massive increase
in Middle Eastern capacity is driven by the indigenous
advantage of low feedstock costs coupled with
the inherent economies of scale associated with
large petrochemical investments. These two factors
provide compelling reasons why the Middle East
is poised to take on the lion's share of new global
capacity growth.
Nexant projects that approximately 19 million
tons of ethylene capacity will be added in the
Middle East in the next five years. This "fourth
phase" of capacity additions in the region
can be characterized as follows: |
The export buildup from the Middle
East would most likely remain targeted towards
Asia , the fastest growing region of global petrochemical
demand and the region with a substantial deficit
in commodity chemicals. Ethylene prices have recently
gone up very sharply & reached almost US$1500/MT
by September 2006. All these new expansions as
well as restart of the existing plants after maintenance
shutdown will help in controlling price or in
fact reducing price of ethylene. It is expected
that price of ethylene would fall by 16 % or reach
a level of US$1180-1200/MT. It could go down even
to US$1100/MT by the end of 2006.
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