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India launches anti-dumping probe into s-PVC imports

  • : Chemicals, Petrochemicals
  • 24/03/27

India has launched an anti-dumping investigation into suspension polyvinyl chloride (s-PVC) imports originating from China, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and the US during October 2022 to September 2023.

Three out of five Indian s-PVC producers have filed an application to investigate potential dumping of s-PVC imports into India. The Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MCI) issued a notice on 26 March announcing the launch of the investigation. The investigation primarily revolves around PVC grades manufactured from a suspension polymerisation process, which are typically considered general-purpose grades across global markets.

The investigation does not include cross-linked PVC, chlorinated PVC, mass PVC or paste PVC. MCI has already announced an anti-dumping investigation into paste PVC imports in October 2023.

Applicants have also requested for a retrospective imposition of potential anti-dumping duties, saying that there is a clear history of s-PVC import dumping from the above mentioned origins since the expiration of previous anti-dumping duties on s-PVC imports in February 2022.

Upcoming capacities and import barriers

India has around 1.6mn t/yr of domestic PVC production capacity as of 2023, according to Argus data.

India also imported 3.2mn t of PVC from various origins last year, with the largest growth in supplies from China, northeast Asia and North America.

This was mainly attributable to rising PVC demand in India following continuing government incentives to boost construction and agricultural activity in the country, with both industries heavily reliant on supply of PVC pipes.

Furthermore, the Indian market is readying itself for the addition of new chlor-vinyl production capacities in coming years, with an aim to bring total nameplate PVC capacity in India to 3.8mn t/yr as of 2028. Indian authorities have already announced several measures targeted at controlling the flow of PVC imports into India as a result. Fresh anti-dumping investigations have started after India's ministry of chemicals and fertilizers announced BIS quality restrictions on PVC and PP imports in February.

A delay in some Indian PVC capacity start-ups remains plausible, but new production in the country will likely limit incremental PVC imports in the coming years, or at least prevent them reaching record-high levels as in 2023.

India PVC imports '000t

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25/01/17

US housing permits drop in Dec, PVC demand stagnant

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Houston, 17 January (Argus) — A decline in US housing permits in December signaled continued constrains on new construction to start 2025, even as single-family starts rose. Suspension-grade polyvinyl chloride (PVC) contracts in the US were flat for December with Argus assessing the price at 57.5¢/lb. Discussions for January point to a possible rollover as well, even as feedstock ethylene prices rise, because demand is still soft at the start of the new year. Privately-owned US housing permits declined to a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 1.483mn units in December, down 0.7pc from November and 3.1pc off from December 2023 according to the US Census Bureau and the Department for Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Single-family permits were at a rate of 992,000 units in December, up 1.6pc from November but still 2.5pc lower from a year earlier. New starts were at a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 1.499mn units, a 15.8pc increase from November but still 4.4pc below December 2023. The jump was attributable to a 59pc surge in multi-family home starts, which tend to be more volatile month-to-month. Single-family starts grew to a rate of 1.05mn units, up 3.3pc from November but still 2.6pc lower from the year before. Total permits never grew for two consecutive months or longer over the course of 2024, in large part due to volatility in multi-family construction. Single-family permits did grow each month since September, but each month remained below the prior year's rate from June onward. Both the inconsistent growth in overall permits as well as lagging year-over-year improvement in single-family permits have contributed to PVC buyers in the US market expecting stable but soft demand for the first half of 2025. Builder confidence rose by 1 point in January to 47, according to the National Association of Home Builder (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI). Builders hope the new year will bring a better economic and regulatory environment. But concerns remain that building material tariffs and costs, as well as a larger government deficit could put upward pressure on inflation and mortgage rates. Any number below 50 still indicates a bearish sentiment. The modest expectations from housing market participants come as 30-year mortgage rates rose above 7pc last week, as the Federal Reserve scaled back its expected interest rate cuts for 2025 to two in mid-December from four quarter point cuts penciled in in September. Both developments add further pressure to the housing market by raising the cost to buy homes as well as to build them. By Aaron May Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Braskem to invest $100mn in PE, PVC expansion


25/01/17
25/01/17

Braskem to invest $100mn in PE, PVC expansion

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Poland's Azoty nears sale of PDH/PP plant to Orlen


25/01/17
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Poland's Azoty nears sale of PDH/PP plant to Orlen

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Ingevity mulls performance chemicals, CTO refinery sale


25/01/17
25/01/17

Ingevity mulls performance chemicals, CTO refinery sale

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Eni plans to close Brindisi cracker by end April


25/01/15
25/01/15

Eni plans to close Brindisi cracker by end April

Milan, 15 January (Argus) — Italy's Eni is planning to close its steam cracking capacity in Brindisi by the end of April despite calls for a rethink, trade union Filctem Cgil said. "The company said it intends to close the cracker within the first four months of the year," Filctem Cgil national secretary Antonio Pepe told Argus . The timeline emerged last week at a meeting between the trade unions, government and Eni at the industry ministry in Rome called to discuss the next steps for the Brindisi plant. It followed an earlier meeting in December on Eni's plans to shut its cracking capacity at Priolo in Sicily and end polyethylene production at its 160,000t/yr site in Ragusa. At that meeting Eni said it intended to close the Priolo cracker by the end of this year and start of 2026. "There will now be a final meeting at the end of this month to pull together the threads of the two meetings and take decisions," Pepe said. Eni, which is more than 30pc state owned, is looking to significantly cut the exposure of its chemicals business Versalis to basic chemicals, a sector that it sees is facing structural and irreversible decline in Europe. Last October, it unveiled a €2bn ($2.06bn) euro restructuring plan to close basic chemical plants and invest in innovative platforms over the next five years. The plans include building a new biorefinery at the Priolo site at a cost of around €800-900mn. Eni has previously said the Brindisi and Priolo crackers will be shut down within 12-18 months . The nameplate ethylene capacity at Brindisi is 410,000 t/yr and propylene capacity is 220,000 t/yr. The Priolo site has nameplate capacities of 430,000 t/yr ethylene, 250,000 t/yr propylene, and 790,000 t/yr aromatics. Filctem CGIL has called on Rome to reject Eni's plans to close cracking operations at Brindisi and Priolo, claiming it would put 20,000 jobs at risk and deal a death blow to Italy's chemicals industry. By Stephen Jewkes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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