

Light olefins
Overview
The global light olefins market is made up of ethylene and propylene monomers. These product markets can be affected by a great many factors.
Ethylene is the most widely used commodity chemical and is produced globally in all major regions. It is converted into many products used in daily life like plastic packaging, durable goods, hygiene products and other consumer items. The ethylene market is driven primarily by regions of low production cost and regions of high demand growth. Polyethylene, ethylene’s largest derivative, represents about 65pc of global ethylene demand. Anyone involved in the ethylene industry – directly or indirectly – needs market and pricing insight to anticipate supply shortages and potential swings in pricing.
Propylene is the second most widely used commodity chemical and is produced globally in all major regions. Propylene is a volatile commodity because of its predominantly co-product nature and unpredictable supply, but recently the industry has been trending to more on-purpose production. It is converted into many products used in daily life like plastic packaging, durable goods, automotive products, and woven fabrics. Polypropylene, propylene ’s largest derivative, represents about 70pc of global propylene demand. Anyone involved in the propylene industry – directly or indirectly – needs market and pricing insight to anticipate supply shortages and potential swings in pricing.
Our light olefins experts will help you determine what trends to track and how to stay competitive in today’s ever-changing global market.
Latest light olefins news
Browse the latest market moving news on the global light olefins industry.
EU consults on tariffs for €95bn US imports
EU consults on tariffs for €95bn US imports
Brussels, 9 May (Argus) — The European Commission is consulting on an extensive list, worth €95bn ($107bn), of US industrial, agricultural and other imports that could be subject to tariff countermeasures. The long list includes extends from livestock, biofuels, wood pellets to metals, aircraft, tankers and polymers . The consultation runs until midday on 10 June. It is aimed at stakeholders affected by US measures and possible EU rebalancing measures. Also considered for possible countermeasures are restrictions, worth €4.4bn, on EU exports to the US of steel, iron and aluminium scrap, as well as toluidines, alcoholic solutions and enzymes (CN codes 7204, 7602, 292143, 330210 and 350790). The commission linked the possible new measures to US universal tariffs and to Washington's specific tariffs on cars and car parts. The commission said the public consultation is a necessary procedural step. It does not automatically result in countermeasures. The EU also launched a WTO dispute procedure against the US for Washington's universal tariffs, set at 20pc for EU goods and currently paused at 10pc, and at 25pc on all imports of vehicles and car parts. The commission will need approval by EU governments under a simplified legislative procedure. Officials say this will complete a legal act for the countermeasures, making them "ready to use" if talks with the US do not produce a "satisfactory" result. The list of products potentially targeted includes livestock, along with items ranging from spectacles to antiques. The 218-page list includes a range of agricultural and food products including oats, maize, and cereal pellets. Also included are biodiesel and wood pellets (CN codes 38260010, 44013100), as well as paper and cotton products. Aluminium, iron, steel are listed together with a wide range of other goods from gas turbines, ships propellers and blades, aircraft, sea-going tankers and other vessels. Polymers, copolymers, polyesters and other products are not spared (CN codes 39039090 and more). On 10 April, the EU paused its reciprocal tariffs against the US for 90 days, responding to a US pause. The EU notes that €379bn, or 70pc, of the bloc's exports to the US are currently subject to new or paused tariffs. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
OxyChem maintains demand estimates for 2025
OxyChem maintains demand estimates for 2025
Houston, 8 May (Argus) — US chemical producer OxyChem is maintaining expectations for demand growth in its key sectors this year and remains committed to its profit guidance despite various market challenges. OxyChem during its first quarter earnings call today said its full-year profit guidance is $900mn-$1bn, roughly in line with the $1bn midpoint guidance for 2025 it expected during its 2024 fourth quarter earnings call. The company said the performance of its chemical sector exceeded expectations for the first quarter, although winter weather disrupted production and stoked higher operating costs during the three-month period. Sales revenue totaled $1.19bn in the first quarter, less than 1pc higher than a year earlier. The company expects domestic polyvinyl chloride (PVC) consumption to grow by 4-5pc in 2025 from last year, while higher costs associated with first quarter disruptions were now over. But the company added there is still uncertainty around how demand, costs, and prices will overlap during the months ahead. Challenges to PVC prices persist because of China's increasing dominance in the global market. China's global PVC market share grew from virtually nothing in 2020 to roughly 30pc in 2024 as producers sold overbuilt domestic supply, OxyChem said. China's increased presence in the export market weighed on global PVC export prices, which eventually pressured domestic US contract prices, the company added. OxyChem anticipates caustic soda demand will mirror last year, but recent expansions in the wider industry could pressure prices. OxyChem reported a $185mn profit for the first quarter, 27pc lower than the same quarter a year earlier despite higher sales revenue. By Aaron May Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
TotalEnergies to close Antwerp cracker
TotalEnergies to close Antwerp cracker
London, 7 May (Argus) — TotalEnergies plans to close one of two crackers at its integrated refining and petrochemicals complex in Antwerp, Belgium, by the end of 2027 owing to "considerable overcapacity in the petrochemicals market", the firm says. No downstream units at Antwerp are expected to be affected as the cracker is not integrated with them, it says. The non-renewal of a major third-party ethylene contract by the end of 2027 was the main driver behind the announcement, TotalEnergies says. The company will shut down the 570,000 t/yr flexible cracker that can be fed with up to 40pc butane, 10pc propane and 10pc ethane as well as 40-100pc naphtha. The other unaffected 600,000 t/yr unit can use the same ratios of butane and ethane but up to 40pc of propane. The planned closure will come shortly after the expected start-up of UK firm Ineos' 1.45mn t/yr ethane cracker in Antwerp. Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Orbia focused on cost in face of weak PVC market
Orbia focused on cost in face of weak PVC market
Houston, 25 April (Argus) — Mexico-based chemicals producers Orbia is focusing on reducing future costs as the broader polyvinyl chloride (PVC) industry faces weakening market dynamics. Orbia said Friday it would focus on maintaining strict discipline on fixed costs, working capital, and capital investments to weather the turbulent global economic landscape. The company is targeting $250mn in savings by 2027, with cumulative savings of $160mn by the end of 2025. The company also expects $75mn of divestments by the end of the year in its building and infrastructure segment. Plants and related infrastructure in Europe were the primary targets of the optimization, according to company officials on the first-quarter earnings call. Orbia chief executive Sameer Bharadwaj said the company could revise capital expenditures lower from its initial $400mn target provided earlier this year should market conditions further deteriorate. Short-term operating costs currently face lower levels with falling ethane prices, a critical feedstock to manufacture ethylene for PVC production. The focus on cost management was spurred by sluggishness in the global PVC market. Chinese and US PVC producers drove export prices lower as a means of moving excess capacity, which Orbia expects to continue. "PVC pricing is as low as it gets" Bharadwaj said. He added producer margins would be squeezed further if product prices continue to decrease. Orbia posted a $41mn profit during the first quarter, down from the $106mn profit a year earlier. Orbia's polymer solutions segment, which includes PVC production, reported $6mn loss during the three-month period because of lower global prices for vinyls and a force majeure at its Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, plant that was lifted in mid-April. Orbia made a $24mn profit during the same period a year ago. The building and infrastructure segment, inclusive of PVC products, posted a $3mn profit for the quarter compared to a $33mn profit a year earlier. By Aaron May Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
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