Generic Hero BannerGeneric Hero Banner
Latest market news

US ethane exports slump as China flows blocked

  • Market: LPG
  • 17/06/25

The EIA has revised down its forecast for US ethane exports following the introduction of licensing requirements, writes Amy Strahan

US exports of ethane fell to a nearly five-year low in early June following the US Department of Commerce's restrictions on shipments to China, but market participants expect the trade dispute to be short-lived.

The department's Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) sent a letter to midstream firm Enterprise Products in late May requiring it as the operator of the 240,000 b/d (5mn t/yr) Morgan's Point ethane terminal in Texas to obtain a licence for future shipments to China citing possible military uses for ethane and butane. The US' largest ethane exporter, Energy Transfer, which operates the 180,000 b/d Nederland ethane terminal, then received a similar notice on 3 June. Enterprise's request for emergency authorisation to ship three ethane cargoes totalling 2.2mn bl (177,000t) was subsequently denied, sending ethane prices at the Mont Belvieu hub in Texas to a six-month low of 19.25¢/USG ($142/t) on 5 June.

Around 198,000 b/d of US ethane loaded during the week to 26 May, after Enterprise received its letter, down from 410,000 b/d a week earlier and 547,000 b/d in the same week of 2024, Kpler data show. They are forecast to stand at 218,000 b/d over the week to 9 June. Ethane prices at Mont Belvieu had recovered to levels seen before the trade restriction by 10 June, owing in part to seasonal gains in Gulf coast natural gas prices but also because market participants expect disruptions to cargo loadings to be temporary, with the US and China holding trade talks in London this month.

Very large ethane carriers (VLEC) that deliver ethane to China were on standby by mid-June. The Pacific Ineos Grenadier, which loaded ethane from Morgan's Point while Enterprise appealed against the BIS measure, has been moored at the company's nearby Houston terminal since 9 June. Satellite's Seri Erlang remains offshore Energy Transfer's Nederland facility, while its STL Qianjiang, which loaded at Nederland in the first week of June, is now heading to India. Another Satellite vessel, STL Yangtze, discharged in India in early June, possibly owing to maintenance at Satellite's cracker in Lianyungang, China, and is now returning to Nederland, according to Kpler.

"We are all hoping the policy will be reversed soon," one market participant says, while another adds that it is likely to be resolved in days and not weeks.

Restricted view

US government agency the EIA has nevertheless attempted to forecast the impact the restriction would have on US ethane exports, revising down its forecast by 51pc to 310,000 b/d (6.4mn t/yr) for 2026. US ethane export capacity is on track to grow to as much as 900,000 b/d by the end of next year following the opening of new projects, including Enterprise's new 360,000 b/d Neches River ethane and propane terminal near Beaumont, Texas, and expansions at Morgan's Point and Energy Transfer's Marcus Hook terminals.

Chinese buyers of US ethane are also hopeful of a relatively swift resolution owing to the mercurial trade policy of the Donald Trump administration. If it is not forthcoming, they may look to switch feedslates to LPG and naphtha when possible in the shorter term, and those that have invested in new VLEC fleets could repurpose them to LPG or ethylene in the longer term. Neither would be an attractive proposition given the substantial levels of investment in new ethane-fed cracking and VLEC capacity, but would ensure that domestic downstream derivative plants are kept running. Chinese companies are unlikely to begin importing ethylene instead given the margins would still be uncompetitive compared with cracking alternative feedstocks. In any event, buyers "do not want to make a big decision they will regret", one market participant says.

Mont Belvieu ethane price

Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
15/07/25

EU proposes support package for chemicals sector

EU proposes support package for chemicals sector

The measure aims to address high energy costs, global competition and weak demand, writes Dafydd ab Iago Brussels, 15 July (Argus) — The European Commission on 8 July proposed measures to support the EU chemicals sector, aiming to address high energy costs, global competition and weak demand. The plan includes extending emissions trading system (ETS) compensation to more producers and simplifying fertilizer registration rules. The commission says the simplification measures could save the sector €363mn/yr ($423mn/yr). The proposals are part of a broader plan to boost competitiveness and secure supply chains. A new Critical Chemicals Alliance will identify key production sites needing policy support, targeting trade issues such as supply chain dependencies and market distortions. The commission also pledged to apply trade defence measures more quickly and expand chemical import monitoring. Although the commission stopped short of proposing a Critical Chemicals Act — which would legally define specific chemicals for support — it named steam crackers, ammonia, chlorine and methanol as "essential" to the EU economy. The alliance will aim to align investment and co-ordinate support, including through the bloc's Important Projects of Common European Interest programme. The commission also defined low-carbon hydrogen and plans to allow more state aid for electricity-intensive chemical producers by year-end. It encouraged the use of carbon capture, biomass, waste and renewables. The plan uses "all levers" to put the sector back on a growth track, with measures to retain steam crackers and other key assets in Europe, EU industry commissioner Stephane Sejourne says. He also highlighted efforts to secure domestic demand for "clean and made-in-Europe chemicals". Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Alt-fuel ship orders fall in 1H25: DNV


15/07/25
News
15/07/25

Alt-fuel ship orders fall in 1H25: DNV

Sao Paulo, 15 July (Argus) — Ship orders for new alternative-fuelled vessels fell to 151 in the first half of 2025 compared with 179 a year earlier, according to Norway-based classification agency DNV. These orders represented 19.8mn gross tonnes, up by 78pc from the same period in 2024. LNG-fuelled vessels accounted for 87 of the new orders in the first half, followed by 40 methanol-fuelled ships, 17 LPG-powered vessels, and four hydrogen and three ammonia-fuelled ships. Orders stood at 19 in June, up from 16 in May, with two of these LPG-fuelled carriers. The total fleet of ships that could run on LPG stood at just over 150 in the final quarter of last year , with around 126 on order by 2028 following the latest additions, as orders lag other fuel types despite low prices because of safety issues and a lack of four-stroke engines. New orders, 1H 2025 Fuel Number of vessels LNG-fueled 87 Methanol-fueled 40 LPG-fueled 17 Hydrogen-fueled 4 Ammonia-fueled 3 DNV Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Trump threatens 35pc tariff on Canada by 1 August


15/07/25
News
15/07/25

Trump threatens 35pc tariff on Canada by 1 August

Houston, 15 July (Argus) — The US will impose a 35pc tariff on all imports from Canada effective on 1 August, President Donald Trump said in a 10 July letter to Canadian prime minister Mark Carney. The letter, which Trump posted on social media, noted that Canada previously planned retaliatory tariffs in response to the US' first tariff threats in the spring. He repeated his earliest justification for the tariffs — the illegal smuggling of fentanyl into the US from Canada — and said he would consider "an adjustment" to the tariffs if Canada worked with him to stop that flow. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

EU chemical plan neglects immediate pressures: Ineos


15/07/25
News
15/07/25

EU chemical plan neglects immediate pressures: Ineos

London, 15 July (Argus) — The EU's new chemical industry plan fails to respond to key immediate pressures on Europe's industry, UK-based Ineos had said. These pressures include the high cost of natural gas and the growing cost of carbon emissions, it said. The European Commission proposed its European Chemicals Industry Plan on 8 July to help the EU sector tackle high energy costs, global competition and weak demand. The commission said its plan could save the sector €363mn/yr. Without action, the competitiveness of European industry may erode, and investment may shift elsewhere, Ineos said. It said its integrated petrochemicals facility in Cologne, Germany, costs €240mn/yr ($280mn) more to operate than it would in the US because of the higher gas, electricity and carbon bills in Europe. More than 20 chemical plants have closed in Europe in the past two years, according to Ineos. "Immediate reduction of gas pricing and removal of carbon costs must be the next step if we are serious about maintaining a chemical industry in Europe." Ineos said. The European Chemical Industrial Council (Cefic) said the Chemical Industry Action Plan is an important step towards improving the competitiveness and resilience of the EU chemical industry. "Co-ordinated action by member states is now urgently needed to turn this signal into results," it said. "Each day of inaction further weakens European industry." By Tim van Gardingen Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Canada focuses on new US deadline, diversifying trade


11/07/25
News
11/07/25

Canada focuses on new US deadline, diversifying trade

Calgary, 11 July (Argus) — Canadian prime minister Mark Carney reiterated his plan to diversify trade with countries "throughout the world" following another round of tariff threats, and another deadline, from US president Donald Trump. Carney's comments on social media late on 10 July came hours after Trump said Canada could expect a 35pc tariff on all imports , effective 1 August, repeating earlier claims that the northern country was not doing enough to stop fentanyl from crossing into the US. Canada has said these claims are bogus but in late-2024 still committed to spending $900bn (C$1.3bn) on border security measures over six years. "Canada has made vital progress to stop the source of fentanyl in North America," Carney wrote on X. The prime minister said he is now working to strike a new trade deal before the 1 August deadline. Trump and Carney last month agreed they would work toward a broad trade agreement by mid-July, with Canada at the time targeting 21 July to finalize a deal. The 35pc tariff would be separate from tariffs set for specific sectors, which include a 50pc tariff on copper imports. It is not clear if any imports currently covered by the US-Mexico-Canada trade agreement (USMCA) would be affected by Trump's latest tariff threats. Carney has advocated the need to shore up trade partnerships with "reliable" countries since being sworn is as prime minister in March, saying the old relationship with the US "is over". The energy-rich nation needs to build more infrastructure to unlock this potential, and with a surge in public support, is trying to entice developers with a new law to fast-track project approvals . But those are multi-year efforts and Canada is still trying to reach a deal with the US to keep goods moving smoothly. The two economies are highly integrated with $762bn worth of goods crossing the US-Canada border in 2024, according to the Office of the US Trade Representative. Canada on 29 June rescinded a digital sales tax (DST) that would have collected revenue from the US' largest tech companies, after US secretary of commerce Howard Lutnick said the tax could have been a deal breaker in trade negotiations. That show of good faith — which seemingly got nothing in return — was criticized within Canada and contrary to Carney's repeated "elbows up" mantra in the face of Trump's threats. By Brett Holmes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more