India and Saudi Arabia are to collaborate on the development of two integrated refinery and petrochemical plants in India. The plan was announced after Indian prime minister Narendra Modi met Saudi counterpart Mohammed bin Salman in Jeddah on 22 April, as part of the India–Saudi Arabia Strategic Partnership Council. Saudi Arabia in 2019 pledged to invest $100bn in India in several sectors including energy and petrochemicals. No further details have been provided but the projects could be Indian state-run BPCL's planned facility in Andhra Pradesh and oil firm ONGC's refinery project in Gujarat, according to industry participants. Plans for a 1.2mn b/d refinery in Ratnagiri alongside the UAE's Adnoc have been abandoned because of logistical and land acquisition challenges, industry participants say.
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Viewpoint: US midcontinent uncertain over return of E15
Viewpoint: US midcontinent uncertain over return of E15
Houston, 24 December (Argus) — The US midcontinent fuel market is again poised to enter a spring driving season fraught with uncertainty over the future of 15pc ethanol gasoline (E15), which boosts demand for higher-cost, lower Reid vapor pressure (RVP) fuel. Production of E15 requires blending with more costly, lower RVP fuel because E15 does not qualify for the 1-psi Clean Air Act waiver available for E10 production, a waiver that allows blenders to use less costly, higher RVP fuel. On 17 March, non-waiver gasoline ballooned to a 19¢/USG premium against waiver fuel, as Magellan added storage for the boutique grade non-waiver fuel and market participants wondered whether the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) would intervene. From 17 March to 1 May, traders bought non-waiver gasoline for 10¢/USG more than in past years, before the EPA issued emergency waivers and closed the gap between the grades. Ahead of the 2026 driving season, the situation is much the same. Market participants are uncertain whether non-waiver grades will return, or whether there will be an act of Congress or additional EPA waivers to resolve any price discrepancies. Eight US states — Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, South Dakota, Wisconsin and Ohio — requested to opt out of the 1-psi waiver in 2022, a rule that was approved in 2024 and then briefly implemented in 2025, although Ohio and South Dakota deferred implementation. The states requested to opt out of the 1-psi waiver to secure access to year-round E15, which otherwise cannot be produced during summer due to volatility limits. The waiver allows for E10 to be produced at 10 RVP while E15 without the waiver needs to be blended to 9 RVP. EPA issued emergency waivers on 1 May 2025 that allowed for E15 to be made with 9 RVP gasoline. This marked the fourth consecutive year that the EPA had issued such waivers to eliminate the need for the non-waiver specification. To waiver or not to waiver When waiver/non-waiver gasoline was active from 17 March to 1 May, Magellan pipeline V grade suboctane non-waiver gasoline in the southern midcontinent, also known as Group 3, traded at an average 10.35¢/USG premium to waiver gasoline, or about 5pc higher. Conventional 91 gasoline A grade on the same pipeline averaged a 10.43¢/USG spread, or a 4.2pc premium. Chicago, in contrast, had most of its non-waiver trade focused on the West Shore/Badger system, which runs through Wisconsin and Illinois, while the Buckeye Complex trading hub in Indiana remained on waiver product. The West Shore/Badger pipeline system non-waiver CBOB averaged a 4.32¢/USG premium to Buckeye Complex's waiver CBOB, a difference of 2.1pc. Those spreads could be even wider next year, depending on the approach of the regional pipelines and the overall availability of non-waiver product. Looking ahead Participants in the US midcontinent market have expressed uncertainty about the possibility of non-waiver returning. The American Petroleum Institute (API) along with ethanol groups and fuel retailers have publicly endorsed a bill that would allow year-round E15 and curb small refiners' ability to seek exemptions from biofuel blend quotas. A provision for extending the 1-psi waiver to E15 was included in a funding bill in December 2024, but ultimately did not make it into law. Since then, the year-round E15 issue has become entangled with small refiner exemptions with API advocating for the year-round E15 bill with the caveat that the process for gaining exemptions for small refiners become more stringent. API is also seeking to avoid having larger refiners compensate for blending exemptions granted smaller refiners. Barring an act of Congress or more EPA emergency waivers, the US midcontinent is poised to enter another summer driving season that includes both waiver and non-waiver product. By Zach Appel Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Viewpoint: European EO faces structural oversupply
Viewpoint: European EO faces structural oversupply
Amsterdam, 24 December (Argus) — Europe's ethylene oxide (EO) market is heading into 2026 with supply outstripping demand. Producers are shifting towards merchant sales rather than captive use for commoditised derivatives. Downstream derivatives such as ethylene glycols and ethanolamines remain under pressure from imports and weak regional demand. Suppliers are chasing purified EO sales, which offer better returns and face little competition from overseas players. EO's hazardous nature makes it difficult to transport, keeping supply local and largely tied to long-term contracts. Merchant EO demand in Europe is flat at best. This is increasing competition for volumes among producers and putting pressure on "adders" in formula-based contracts for next year. Surfactants, which account for most merchant EO consumption, have held up better than other downstream sectors, supported by steady demand from personal care, household and industrial cleaning applications. But polyether polyols remain exposed to sluggish construction and automotive markets, while cautious consumer confidence is curbing demand for durable goods. Both sectors also face pressure from competitively priced imports, further weighing on domestic margins. Despite the challenging market environment, EO-related capacity rationalisation has been limited in Europe this year. Clariant confirmed in September that it will decommission one of its two EO units at Gendorf, Germany, by the end of the year. But the closure is not expected to tighten merchant EO availability, as the unit is linked to ethylene glycols production rather than purified EO, market participants said. Ineos is investing €250mn to modernise its steam cracker at Lavera, France — a site previously viewed as vulnerable — signalling confidence in the long-term viability of the complex, including EO and derivatives operations. European EO producers' resilience could be tested in 2026. The European Commission has proposed eliminating customs duties on a wide range of US industrial goods under the EU-US trade deal, a move broadly supported by EU member states. The proposal still needs European Parliament approval, but if implemented it could weigh on domestic producers' profitability. EU countries added a bilateral safeguard mechanism to the draft law, to be activated if significant import increases and serious injury to domestic producers follow tariff concessions. The US is a major supplier of EO derivatives, including ethylene glycols, ethanolamines and E-series glycol ethers to the EU, and zero tariffs could open up arbitrage opportunities for spot imports more frequently. Monoethylene glycol will remain somewhat protected from an influx of imports by existing anti-dumping duties on US and Saudi material, effective until 16 November 2026. European producers are preparing for a sunset review of the measures, and any changes could quickly reshape the competitive landscape. Market participants are also watching the impact of other anti-dumping investigations in the polyethylene terephthalate (PET) value chain — probes into PET imports from Vietnam, with pre-disclosure expected on 24 December, and into purified terephthalic acid (PTA) imports from South Korea and Mexico due to be finalised in 2026. The commission imposed definitive anti-dumping duties on Chinese PET imports in April 2024, but this has done little to stem the flow of low-cost imports into Europe, with trade shifting to other origins instead. Protectionist measures offer temporary relief but do not address Europe's structural disadvantages — high energy costs and carbon reduction obligations. European MEG demand is shrinking because of ongoing downstream closures, with a Dutch facility permanently closed in 2024 and a Spanish producer ceasing output in 2025 amid high regional production costs and pressure from imports. Further PET capacity shutdowns are anticipated next year if challenging market conditions persist. By Liana Minihan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Japan’s petchem firms finalise polymer integration plan
Japan’s petchem firms finalise polymer integration plan
Tokyo, 24 December (Argus) — Japanese petrochemical producers Sumitomo Chemical and Prime Polymer have finalised their contract to integrate Sumitomo's polyolefin production businesses with Prime Polymer, aiming to enhance the competitiveness of their polyolefin businesses. Prime Polymer — a joint venture between petrochemical firm Mitsui Chemicals and refiner Idemitsu — will merge Sumitomo's domestic polypropylene (PP) and linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) businesses on 1 July 2026, the companies said on 24 December. Sumitomo's PP and LLDPE production-related assets will be integrated into Prime Polymer later on 1 April 2027, as the system integration will take some time after the business merger, the companies said. After the integration, Prime Polymer will have a production capacity of 1.59mn t/yr for PP and 720,000 t/yr for PE in Japan. Mitsui will hold a 52pc share in Prime Polymer and Idemitsu will have 28pc, with Sumitomo newly acquiring 20pc in exchange for the integration of its polyolefin businesses into Prime Polymer. Currently Mitsui and Idemitsu hold a 65pc and 35pc share in Prime Polymer respectively. Prime Polymer has a production capacity of 1.26mn t/yr for PP and 550,000 t/yr for PE in Japan currently. Demand for domestically produced polyolefins will continue to decline because of shrinking domestic demand, population decline and changing lifestyles, the companies said. The companies aim to optimise their polyolefin businesses and achieve annual cost savings of over ¥8bn/yr ($51mn/yr) through this business integration. Idemitsu, Mitsui and Sumitomo first announced this integration plan in September. By Kohei Yamamoto Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Mexico's trade surplus widens in Nov
Mexico's trade surplus widens in Nov
Mexico City, 23 December (Argus) — Mexico's trade surplus widened slightly in November from the previous month, despite sharp declines in both exports and imports in the non-oil category. Mexico posted a $663mn trade surplus in November, statistics agency Inegi said, up from a $606mn surplus in October, though on lower overall trade volumes. Total exports reached $56.4bn, while imports stood at $55.7bn, compared with $66.1bn and $65.5bn, respectively, in October. The result contrasted with the $391mn deficit forecast by Mexican bank Banorte. Inegi attributed the wider surplus to an increase in the non-oil trade surplus to $2.84bn in November from $2.74bn in October, alongside a widening of the oil trade deficit to $2.18bn from $2.13bn. Within non-oil trade, manufacturing exports fell by 16pc to $52.1bn in November from the prior month, while automotive exports declined by 2.2pc to $15.8bn, following a 4.8pc increase in October. The US absorbed 79pc of Mexico's light vehicle exports from January-November, with Mexico supplying 17pc of total US auto imports over the 11-month period, according to Mexican auto industry association AMDA. The "others" component of non-oil manufacturing exports dropped by 20pc to $36.3bn in November, nearly erasing October's 23pc gain to $45.5bn. The cumulative impact of US tariffs on Mexican goods is becoming clearer. Mexican bank Banco Base estimates the US levied an effective 4.69pc tariff on Mexican goods through September — below the 25pc blanket rate due to exemptions for goods complying with the USMCA free trade agreement. "The low tariffs have allowed Mexican exports to continue growing, particularly computer equipment, which rose by 83.39pc year to date through September compared with the same period in 2024, with a tariff of just 0.17pc," the bank said. Those "contrast sharply with passenger cars, which face a 15.29pc tariff," which maintain expectations of 7pc annual export growth in 2025, according to the bank. Agricultural exports rose by 3.8pc to $1.4bn in November after increases of 7.2pc in October and 4.1pc in September. Oil-related exports totaled $1.55bn in November, down from $1.82bn in October, including $1.03bn in crude and $514mn in refined products on lower prices and volumes. Mexico's crude export basket averaged $57.66/bl, down by $0.84/bl from October and $8.09/bl lower compared with a year earlier. Crude export volumes fell to 597,000 b/d in November from 717,000 b/d in October, remaining well below the 1.088mn b/d exported in November 2024. By James Young Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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