Kuraray acquires US-based startup firm Nelumbo

Kuraray Co., Ltd. (Tokyo) has decided to acquire Nelumbo Inc. (Hayward, California,) a start-up company with materials technology for surface modification, as per Chemweek.

The deal will be executed through Kuraray’s affiliate Kuraray Holdings U.S.A., Inc. The purchase price has not been disclosed.

Nelumbo was founded in 2016 as a technology start-up out of University of California, Berkeley and has been exploring the application and practical use of various substrate surface modification technologies.

In 2023, Kuraray entered into an exclusive partnership agreement with Nelumbo and have been working together to apply the surface modification technology to fibers and other polymer products.

Through this collaboration, Kuraray said it evaluated Nelumbo's technology and concluded that it has potential to improve the functionality of substrate surfaces on a wide range of substrates, including water repellency, without using per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and other chemicals that are increasingly regulated.

”This technology will enhance and expand to Kuraray’s base of polymer chemistry, synthetic chemistry, and related peripheral technologies and provide new value to the market,” said Kuraray.

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Coromandel International and Ma’aden sign fertilizer supply agreement

Coromandel International Ltd. (Hyderabad, India) and Ma’aden (Riyadh) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) for the long-term supply of di-ammonium phosphate (DAP) and NP/NPK fertilizers, as per Chemweek.

The companies did not provide other details of the supply agreement.

"In recent times, DAP availability in India has been impacted due to global supply disruptions. This partnership with Ma’aden is a natural extension of our longstanding relationship and will help Coromandel ensure timely availability of DAP and complex fertilizers,” said Narayanan Vellayan, director – Strategic Sourcing, Coromandel International.

“Ma’aden has been the largest supplier of phosphate fertilizers to India for over a decade. We are expanding our production capacity from 6 million metric tons (MMt) to 9 MMt in the near term, reinforcing our commitment to serve the growing needs of India’s agriculture sector," said Saud Al Tamimi, director – Fertiliser Sales Commercial, Phosphate Business Unit, Ma’aden.

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India's Deepak to boost phenol, acetone and IPA production

The board of directors of Deepak Chem (DCTL), a subsidiary of Deepak, has approved the implementation of a project to expand the production of phenol, acetone and isopropyl alcohol (IPA) at its new facility in India, said the company.

The preliminary total investment in the project will be Rs 3,500 crore ($406 million). The project will be implemented at the polycarbonate resin (PC) plant in Stade, Germany, previously owned by German company Trinseo. In November 2024, it was sold to Deepak Holding for $52.5 million. All the equipment of the plant will be transported to India. The timing of the project has not yet been disclosed.

Currently, the company's plants produce 300,000 tonnes of phenol, 200,000 tonnes of acetone and 80,000 tonnes of IPA annually. The expansion of production will almost double the output of these types of products.

Once the civil works are completed and the phenol and acetone production facilities are up and running, Deepak will be one of the most integrated and largest PC manufacturers in India.

Earlier, it was reported that China's CNOOC and SHELL have made a final investment decision (FID) to expand their petrochemical joint venture CSPC in Huizhou, Guangdong Province, China. In addition to the construction of a third cracker with a capacity of 1.6 million tonnes of ethylene per annum, a plant for the production of specialty chemicals such as PC and carbonate esters with a capacity of 320,000 tonnes per annum will be built.

mrchub.com

China petchem plants face shutdown as tariffs on US LPG loom

Chinese petrochemical makers that buy $11 billion worth of U.S. liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) annually are poised to cut output or shut for maintenance in coming weeks as Beijing's retaliatory tariffs on U.S. imports drive up costs, industry insiders said Reuters.

The industry of over 30 propane dehydrogenation (PDH) plants relies heavily on U.S. LPG, or propane, for processing into plastics intermediary propylene.

Armaan Ashraf, global head of natural gas liquids at consultancy FGE, said tariffs could force Chinese PDH operators to cut average operating rates by nearly 15 percentage points and curb demand for propane from steam crackers and PDH plants by at least 500,000 metric tons per month.

The tit-for-tat trade war that saw China on Wednesday escalate retaliatory duties on U.S. imports to 84% threatens to put a Chinese PDH sector already struggling under thin margins for two years into what an east China-based executive with a major PDH plant called a "harsh winter".

The executive, declining to be named due to company policy, expects overall PDH plant utilisation rates to drop below half of total industry capacity as early as May.

China's 731,000 bpd-PDH sector operated at nearly 70% of capacity in March, down from a peak of around 85% in 2020, according to industry insiders and FGE, with plants losing an average of 480 yuan ($65.31) per ton in the week of April 6, deepening from the week ago's 384 yuan, LSEG Oil Research analysts said.

Last year, China bought a record 17.3 million tons of U.S. propane, or 550,000 barrels per day, 60% of China's total imports of the gas liquid.

The trade war during President Donald Trump's first term brought China's LPG imports to a halt for nearly two years, but the industry was much smaller then, and operators used cargoes from the Middle East as replacement.
Fuelled by cheap U.S. propane, a by-product of the shale gas boom, PDH plants mushroomed on China's east coast over the past decade, leading to overcapacity amid weakening demand for propylene, said traders and the executive.

Prices of U.S. propane for Asian exports, or the Far East Index assessment, fell nearly 30% to $425 per ton this week as traders factored last Friday's retaliatory tariffs by Beijing. In physical shipments, it's unclear whether U.S. suppliers and Chinese buyers can agree to lower prices to absorb the shock.

While some buyers may be able to re-negotiate with suppliers if contracts permit, others, with term supply deals, may be forced to resell to other Asian buyers.

A growing price gap limits Chinese plants' ability to swap U.S. shipments for rival Middle East barrels that are mostly destined for South Korea and India, traders said.

"The market is still in massive shock and confusion, with buyers and sellers struggling to reach a physical deal. The tariffs have thrown the pricing structure out of the balance," said a veteran trader.

mrc.ru

Ethylene prices fall in Asia

Despite weaker naphtha values, ethylene prices decreased in Asia on Wednesday, as per Polymerupdate.

An industry source in Asia while requesting to remain unidentified informed a Polymerupdate team member, "Prices quoted lower on the back of subdued buying activities in the region."

CFR North East Asia ethylene prices on Wednesday were assessed at the USD 810-820/mt levels, down USD (-10/mt) from Tuesday's assessed levels.

Meanwhile, CFR South East Asia ethylene prices on Wednesday were assessed at the USD 895-905/mt levels, a day on day fall of USD (-10/mt).

We remind, Sinopec and Saudi Aramco have signed a framework agreement to cooperate on the expansion project of the Yanbu refinery in Saudi Arabia. In addition to diesel and gasoline, the new capacity of the complex will produce 1.8 million tons of ethylene and 1.5 million tons of aromatic hydrocarbons per year.

mrchub.com