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Orbia 2Q volumes increase despite shutdown

  • : Petrochemicals
  • 24/07/25

Mexico-based chemicals producer Orbia reported an increase in second-quarter sales volumes across segments, even with its Altamira plant temporarily shut for part of the period.

Second-quarter revenue decreased by 9pc from a year earlier to $1.976bn as lower pricing outweighed steady to higher volumes in most segments.

Orbia's polymer solutions business, which produces polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and related products, reported $644mn in revenue, little changed from a year earlier. Production volumes increased by an undisclosed amount despite a force majeure declaration at Orbia's 690,000 t/yr PVC Altamira plant for over a month. The plant has since resumed operations. Most additional volume was sold to consumers in the US and UK, where economic recovery drove demand.

Revenue in Orbia's building and infrastructure business, which makes pipe and fittings, fell by 5pc on the year to $665mn on lower volumes in Europe and Latin America.

In the second half of the year, polymer solutions end markets are expected to remain relatively flat, although demand is "strong" in the polymer solutions specialty compounds business, chief executive Sameer Bharadwaj said on an earnings call Thursday. PVC pricing is stable, but a potential decline remains a risk. Still, prices will receive support from declining Chinese exports and European anti-dumping duties on US exports. In the building and infrastructure business, demand is improving, partly because of seasonality, he said.


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Phillips 66 shareholders split board vote


25/05/21
25/05/21

Phillips 66 shareholders split board vote

Houston, 21 May (Argus) — Activist hedge fund Elliott Investment Management is set to win two seats on Phillips 66's board of directors, short of its goal of four seats, according to preliminary results. Two Phillips 66 nominees were also elected in the vote, a positive result for the US refiner and midstream operator. Elliott, which has amassed a $2.5bn stake in Phillips 66, had put forth four nominees for the board in a proxy fight which culminated today at an annual meeting of shareholders. Both sides declared victory after the split vote on the four open seats. Phillips 66 said the vote reflects a belief in its integrated strategy of holding assets in different sectors, while Elliott said the vote "sends a clear message" that shareholders demand meaningful change at Phillips 66. The two Elliott nominees elected to the 14-member Phillips 66 board are Sigmund Cornelius, former chief financial officer of ConocoPhillips and Michael Heim, former chief operating officer of Targa Resources, according to preliminary voting results. The two Phillips 66 nominees elected to the board are Nigel Hearne, a 35-year veteran of Chevron, and Robert Pease, a former Motiva and Cenovus downstream executive who was appointed to the board in 2024 to address Elliott's concerns about a shift in focus from refining to midstream. Phillips 66 also said today that shareholders "overwhelmingly" rejected an Elliott proposal requiring annual director resignations, according to the preliminary results. The voting tally will be tabulated and certified by an independent inspector and final results will be reported to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The two Elliott nominees for the Phillips 66 board who were not elected are Brian Coffman, former chief executive at Motiva, and Stacy Nieuwoudt, former energy analyst at Citadel. The two Phillips 66 nominees to the board that were not elected are current director John Lowe, who was up for re-election, and Howard Ungerleider, a former Dow president and chief financial officer. Long-running battle over direction Elliott contends that Phillips 66 has consistently trailed its industry peers and needs to streamline operations, including spinning off or selling its midstream business, selling its 50pc stake in Chevron Phillips Chemical (CPChem), and possibly other assets. Elliott has waged an aggressive campaign, launching a website dubbed "Streamline 66" with power point presentations, podcasts, biographies of its dissident board nominees, press releases and information on how shareholders can vote. Phillips 66 has told shareholders that its board and management team are implementing a transformative strategy that has delivered results. The company has expanded its NGL business, improved its refining cost structure and continues to position CPChem as the lowest cost producer of ethylene, Phillips 66 said. Phillips 66 told shareholders that Elliott was pushing "an aggressive short-term agenda" that would cause disruption, slow momentum and jeopardize shareholders' investment capital. Phillips 66 has made some adjustments since Elliot started to agitate for change. In addition to adding Pease to the board, the company recently agreed to sell off some of its European retail business , and expects about $1.6bn in pre-tax cash proceeds from the sale that it will use toward debt reduction and shareholder returns. But the refiner has resisted the other major Elliott recommendations to divest its midstream business and sell its 50pc share of CPChem, saying earlier this month that the Phillips board has evaluated them and "came to the conclusion that neither action is in the best interest of long-term shareholders at this time". Meanwhile, Chevron has advised Phillips 66 of its interest in acquiring the other half of CPChem "at a reasonable value for both parties", Chevron chief executive Mike Wirth said on 2 May. Three top shareholder advisory firms [backed the Elliott nominees] (https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2687988) in the proxy fight. Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Egan-Jones recommending all four of Elliot's dissident nominees, while Glass Lewis backed three of the four. By Eunice Bridges Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

New law to limit SM shipping into Canada


25/05/20
25/05/20

New law to limit SM shipping into Canada

Houston, 20 May (Argus) — A new shipping standard for hazardous material in Canada could limit styrene monomer (SM) shipments into the country. Transport Canada's new standard, called Containers for Transport of Dangerous Goods by Rail, went into effect on 1 May. The standard restricts SM transportation to class 117 tank cars, phasing out the previously used class 111 tank cars. Class 117 tank cars have a thicker shell and steel jacket outside the car, which provides thermal protection under the jacket to protect the tank car in the event of a fire. BNSF Railway on 24 April began rejecting any billing for tank cars that are subject to the phase-out in order to keep chemical shipments in compliance, the company said. The number of US SM sellers or distributors with class 117 tank cars is limited, meaning the standard could limit SM shipments into Canada, sources said. That could prove problematic if Shell, an SM producer in Canada, is offline long enough. Last week, [Shell declared a force majeure on SM] (https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2689610) from its unit in Scotford, Alberta, but said they expect the plant to be back online as soon as 23 May. Only one other producer in the US, Ineos Styrolution, is known to have access to class 117 tank cars. This producer has a supply of them from their facility in Sarnia, Ontario, although that facility has been offline since April 2023 and the company plans on permanently closing it by October 2026 . The US also restricts shipping of some hazardous materials to class 117 tank cars, but the US regulation does not yet include SM. The US will restrict SM to class 117 tank cars starting 1 May 2029. By Jake Caldwell Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

STS methanol bunkering debuts in Amsterdam


25/05/20
25/05/20

STS methanol bunkering debuts in Amsterdam

Sao Paulo, 20 May (Argus) — The Port of Amsterdam has completed its first ship-to-ship (STS) methanol bunkering operation, marking a key milestone in the port's decarbonisation strategy. The operation involved supplying Van Oord's offshore installation vessel Boreas with 500t of green methanol at the TMA Logistic terminal. The bunkering was carried out by the Chicago, with the fuel supplied by OCI HyFuels, a producer of renewable methanol products such as biomethanol and bio-MTBE. The Boreas is the first newly built offshore installation vessel designed to operate on methanol. Methanol is gaining traction as a viable low-carbon option for ships to use to comply with regulations on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The EU's FuelEU Maritime regulation, which took effect in January this year, mandates a phased reduction in GHG intensity for vessels operating in EU waters — starting with a 2pc cut this year, increasing to 6pc by 2030 and reaching 80pc by 2050, relative to 2020 levels. By Natália Coelho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Phillips 66 vote could change company's course


25/05/19
25/05/19

Phillips 66 vote could change company's course

Houston, 19 May (Argus) — Just four of Phillips 66's 14 board members are up for election at its annual meeting this week, but the outcome could shape the future direction of the US refiner and midstream operator. Activist hedge fund Elliott Investment Management has named four of its own candidates for the vote which will come to a conclusion on 21 May, part of its multi-year effort to push the company to sell assets and focus on core businesses. Elliott, which has amassed a $2.5bn stake in Phillips 66, contends that the company has consistently trailed its industry peers and needs to streamline operations, including spinning off or selling its midstream business, selling its stake in Chevron Phillips Chemical (CPChem), and possibly other assets. Phillips 66 has told shareholders that Elliot is pushing "an aggressive short-term agenda" that would cause disruption, slow momentum and jeopardize shareholders' investments. It says the Phillips 66 board and management team are implementing a "transformative strategy" that has delivered results, expanded its NGL business, improved its refining cost structure and continues to position CPChem as the lowest cost producer of ethylene. "We don't act out of fear or short-term trends," Phillips 66 chief executive office Mark Lashier said in a first quarter earnings call last month. "We act on what we believe will create the most long-term value for our shareholders each and every time." Turning up the heat Elliott alleges that Phillips 66 suffers from "continuous poor corporate governance" and "disingenuous shareholder engagement." Elliott said its proposals could push Phillips 66 stock to more than $200 per share. The stock was trading near $124 per share Monday morning. Elliott's campaign has grown more aggressive in the months leading up to this week's shareholder meeting. It includes launching a website dubbed "Streamline 66" with slide shows, podcasts, biographies of its dissident board nominees, press releases and information on how shareholders can vote by mail, phone or online. Elliott nominees include Brian Coffman, former chief executive at Motiva; Sigmund Cornelius, former chief financial officer of ConocoPhillips; Michael Heim, former chief operating officer of Targa Resources; and Stacy Nieuwoudt, former energy analyst at Citadel. Three top shareholder advisory firms are backing the Elliott nominees in the proxy fight. Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Egan-Jones are recommending all four of Elliot's dissident nominees, while Glass Lewis is backing three of the four — and supporting Phillips 66 nominee Nigel Hearne, a 35-year veteran of Chevron, because his experience "is more critical at this juncture". Phillips 66 pushback Phillips 66 has made some adjustments since Elliot started to agitate for change. In February 2024 it appointed former Motiva and Cenovus downstream executive Robert Pease to the board to address Elliott's concerns about a shift in focus from refining to midstream. And this year it agreed to sell off some of its European retail business , and expects about $1.6bn in pre-tax cash proceeds from the sale that it will use toward debt reduction and shareholder returns. But for the other Elliott recommendations to divest from midstream and sell its 50pc share of CPChem, Phillips 66 said the board has evaluated them and "came to the conclusion that neither action is in the best interest of long-term shareholders at this time". In additon to Hearne, Phillips 66's slate for the open board seats includes putting up Pease and current director John Lowe for re-election and nominating Howard Ungerleider, a former Dow president and chief financial officer. Current board members Gary Adams and Denise Ramos will not stand for re-election. Analysts with US bank TD Cowen said they "suspect Elliott could get some or all of its board members elected" and there could be larger board turnover next year if shareholders approve an Elliott proposal to require each director to submit a resignation to the board every year. The most likely outcome of an Elliott win is that the board "more deeply examines a midstream restructuring", TD Cowen said. By Eunice Bridges Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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