Polish chemicals company Grupa Azoty's 437,000 t/yr propane dehydrogenation (PDH) project in Police, northwest Poland, has been delayed again. The contractor, South Korea's Hyundai Engineering, has asked Azoty to increase the project's budget by nearly €40mn ($43mn) and delay its completion by 95 days, Azoty says. This would push back completion until late May, a year and a half behind schedule. Azoty will analyse the request, it says. Hyundai Engineering told Azoty in November last year that it was 166 days behind schedule. Azoty announced last month that production at the Police plant, which includes 429,000 t/yr of polypropylene capacity, was ramping up, with aims to reach capacity in the third quarter. But it now says the contractor's request may delay a "plant integrity test" that had been planned for this quarter. Azoty cited "unexpected problems during start-up of some installations" as the reason for the delay in August 2023.
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IG4 moves closer to Braskem control
IG4 moves closer to Braskem control
Sao Paulo, 15 December (Argus) — Latin America's largest petrochemical company Braskem said it received notice that its controlling shareholder Novonor has signed a 60-day exclusivity agreement with private equity firm IG4 to buy its shares of Braskem and credits guaranteed by them. Braskem said IG4 also has an agreement with Novonor's creditor banks to acquire all credits against Novonor and related entities that are secured by Braskem shares, worth close to R20bn ($3.71bn). If implemented, a fund advised by IG4 or an affiliate would become the direct or indirect holder of Braskem common and preferred shares representing 50.1pc of voting capital and 34.3pc of total capital. Novonor would retain preferred shares equal to 4pc of Braskem's capital, without governance rights beyond those set by law. The transaction must be approved by Brazil's antitrust watchdog Cade. In July Cade cleared without restrictions a proposed sale of Novonor's controlling stake to Petroquimica Verde, an investment fund linked to businessman Nelson Tanure. While that approval removed a key regulatory hurdle it did not finalize the transaction, which expired after a 90-day exclusivity period. The competition for Braskem's ownership it taking place amid financial struggles for the company and intense market volatility. Fitch Ratings recently downgraded the company's credit rating to CCC+ from BB-, citing refinancing risks and persistent negative free cash flow. By Isabela Mendes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
EU to dilute Ice vehicle phase out: German lawmaker
EU to dilute Ice vehicle phase out: German lawmaker
Brussels, 15 December (Argus) — The European Commission is likely this week to dilute its plan to phase out sales of new internal combustion engine (Ice) vehicles by 2035, according to a lawmaker. "The ban on internal combustion engines is history," said Manfred Weber, the chair of parliament's largest centre-right group EPP. He said the commission will present on 16 December an automotive package that "will revise the CO2 standards for cars, reversing the disastrous ban on internal combustion engines". Weber is a member of Germany's CDU/CSU party, as is commission president Ursula von der Leyen. German chancellor Friedrich Merz has called on the EU to allow the sale of vehicles with highly efficient combustion engines, plug-in hybrids and range-extender EVs beyond 2035. This had faced pushback, with more than 150 European e-mobility firms requesting the commission "stand firm" on its 2035 target. An EU official said the target is now likely to be for a 90pc GHG reduction from 2035 for new vehicles. "As it stands the targets for 2030, but also 2035, are not realistic," said Sigrid de Vries, director general of the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association (ACEA). "Even with a 90pc target [for reducing GHG by 2035], make no mistake, that will be very, very challenging." The European motor industry has already flagged the possibility of huge fines for manufacturers should they fail to meet existing emissions targets, which are for a 15pc reduction by 2029 compared with a 2021 baseline, and a 55pc reduction from the same baseline in 2030-34. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Japan’s Mitsui Chemicals to raise S Korea MDI output
Japan’s Mitsui Chemicals to raise S Korea MDI output
Tokyo, 15 December (Argus) — Japanese petrochemical company Mitsui Chemicals plans to boost output capacity of its methylenediphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) plant in South Korea's South Jeolla province by May 2027. Mitsui Chemicals aims to raise MDI production capacity at the plant by 100,000 t/yr to 710,000 t/yr, from 610,000 t/yr, the company said on 15 December. Kumho Mitsui Chemicals, a 50:50 joint venture between Mitsui and South Korean chemicals firm Kumho Petrochemical, operates the plant. The company plans to begin construction in February 2026. It expects demand for MDI, a core material for polyurethane, to continue growing because of decarbonisation and economic growth, Mitsui Chemicals said. MDI is used for various products including automotive components, furniture, bedding and heat insulation for houses. The company believes the shift towards decarbonisation will drive MDI consumption for heat insulation, while economic growth will enhance demand for more comfortable cars and households. Mitsui Chemicals also expanded MDI production capacity at the plant by 200,000 t/yr to 610,000 t/yr in 2024 . The prospect of MDI demand growth has prompted fellow Japanese petrochemical producer Tosoh to build an MDI splitter in south Vietnam's Ba Ria–Vung Tau province, aiming to begin commercial operations by October 2026. By Nanami Oki Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Aramco Jafurah project still in commissioning: Resend
Aramco Jafurah project still in commissioning: Resend
Clarifies distinction between raw gas and sales gas. Story originally published on 11 December Dubai, 15 December (Argus) — Saudi state-controlled Aramco has begun to commission the first phase of its giant Jafurah natural gas project, but is yet to begin full commercial operations, according to the company's executive vice president of gas Abdulkarim Al-Ghamdi. "Jafurah… we started the commissioning last week," Al-Ghamdi told the Middle East Gas Conference in Dubai on Wednesday. "And that will be commissioned fully now, for production, before year-end." The phase is "on schedule" and "in advanced commissioning", he said. Al-Ghamdi's comments are the first from Aramco since the Saudi finance ministry said production at Jafurah had begun. In its 2026 budget released last week the ministry listed "completion of the first phase of the Jafurah gas plant construction and commencement of production with a capacity of 450mn ft³/d," as one of the country's achievements for 2025. It did not specify a date for the start. Aramco has not made its own start-up announcement. A source close to the project said a formal Aramco announcement regarding Jafurah is likely "soon" ꟷ probably before the end of the year when commissioning is complete, as per Al-Ghamdi's comments. With in-place reserves of 229 trillion ft³ (6.87 trillion m³) of raw gas and 75bn bl of condensate, Jafurah is the largest unconventional gas field in the Mideast Gulf, and constitutes a major pillar of Aramco's ambitious gas expansion plans. The 450mn ft³/d capacity referenced by the ministry reflects the project's initial maximum raw gas processing, which aligns with Aramco's long-held plans for output to begin at 200mn ft³/d as sales gas, rising to 650mn ft³/d of sales gas by the end of 2026. A second phase, which is scheduled to come on stream in 2027, would then gradually lift sales gas production to 2bn ft³/d by the end of the decade. It constitutes part of an ambitious Aramco programme to expand gas production by more than 80pc by the end of the decade, relative to a 2021 baseline of 9.2bn ft³/d. This implies output of at least 16.6bn ft³/d by 2030, with Jafurah delivering just over one-quarter of the increase. Jafurah will also produce about 420mn ft³/d of ethane, and 630,000 b/d of NGLs and condensate as by-products by 2030. Traders told Argus last week that Aramco has offered spot Jafurah condensate for loading in February. Market sources say Jafurah condensate has an API gravity of 49.75° and sulphur content of 0.16pc. The ethane and NGLs will be sent to the Riyas fractionation plant, which is being built as part of the phase two development. The condensate will be sent to the Juaymah terminal, where Aramco is expanding its storage and export facilities. By Nader Itayim Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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