Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Iran, Pakistan, U.A.E. Face 5-Year EU Taxes on Bottle Material

The European Union imposed five- year tariffs against Iran, Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates on a material used in plastic bottles, saying EU producers are victims of trade-distorting subsidies.
The duties on polyethylene terephthalate, also used in plastic films and fibers, widen existing EU protection for producers such as Spain’s Novapet SA against imports from Asia. The new anti-subsidy levies follow provisional measures introduced in June, when the EU took the extra step of taxing the U.A.E.’s sole producer for also selling in Europe below cost, a practice known as dumping
.
In 2007, the EU renewed for five years anti-dumping duties on polyethylene terephthalate from India, Indonesia, Malaysia, South Korea, Thailand and Taiwan to help European producers in Europe’s 3 billion-euro ($4 billion) market. Users of the product, known as PET, include plastic bottle-mold makers such as Resilux NV and bottlers including Coca-Cola Co.

European manufacturers of PET suffered “injury” as a result of subsidized impo
rts from Iran, Pakistan and the U.A.E., the 27-nation EU said in a decision today in Brussels. The duties, which are as high as 139.70 euros a metric ton, will take effect after publication in the Official Journal by Oct. 2.The import taxes are the outcome of probes opened in September 2009 by the European Commission, the bloc’s regulatory arm. Under EU rules, the commission can impose provisional anti- subsidy duties for four months and provisional anti-dumping levies for six months. The EU’s national governments -- acting on a commission proposal -- can turn those measures into “definitive” five-year duties at the same or different rates.

The definitive anti-subsidy or “countervailing” duties on PET are 139.70 euros a ton against Iran, 44.02 euros a ton against Pakistan and 42.34 euros a ton against the U.A.E. The EU will refund importers the difference with higher provisional rates of 142.97 euros on Iran and 83.64 euros on Pakistan; the definitive rate on the U.A.E is the same as the provisional levy.

NOVATEK Completes Deal To Sell NOVATEK-Polymer

NOVATEK has completed a deal to sell 100 percent of NOVATEK-Polymer to SIBUR Holding, the company reported in a news release. NOVATEK turned over 32 percent of its stake in NOVATEK-Polymer on September 2, when the deal was made, while the other 68 percent was transferred after the Federal Antimonopoly Service (FAS) gave its approval for the transaction.

Company executives report that this deal is part of the company's strategy to concentrate on its main business of gas and gas condensate production and refining.

LDPE retains premium over other PE products in Asia


In Asia, LDPE film continues to trade at a premium when compared with other PE products such as LLDPE film and HDPE film. Most sources attribute the ongoing relative strength of the LDPE film market to comparatively tight supplies for this product, with players commenting that a large amount of new LLDPE and HDPE film capacity has been coming on-line for the past two years while relatively few additional LDPE film capacities have come on-line over the same period.

According to data from ChemOrbis Price Wizard, import LDPE film has traded at an average premium of $201/ton over HDPE film on a CFR China, cash basis over the past ten weeks, with the premium showing a tendency to move higher over the past few weeks. From a ten-week low of $157/ton in early August, the LDPE/HDPE film premium rose to a ten-week high of $232/ton earlier in September before falling back to $228/ton last week. Looking at data for the entire year of 2010, the LDPE film/HDPE film premium in China has fluctuated between $150/ton to just over $250/ton for the entire period, with LDPE/HDPE film deltas of $100/ton or less having last been seen in the closing weeks of 2009.


Over the same period, data from ChemOrbis Price Wizard show that the premium between LDPE film and LLDPE film has averaged $153/ton on a CFR China, cash basis, with the premium dipping to a ten-week low of $111/ton in early August, rising to a ten-week high of $177/ton earlier in September and then falling back to $173/ton last week. Looking back over data from the whole of 2010, LDPE film has maintained a premium of around $75-180/ton over LLDPE film, with premiums below the $75/ton mark last being observed in the closing weeks of 2009

Monday, September 27, 2010

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Plan to set up $701m polyethylene plant in Pakistan.


By MUSHTAK PARKER
 
LONDON: A British and Pakistani joint venture, Trans Polymers Limited, is finalizing plans to build  a polyethylene (PE) plant at cost of 520 million euro ($701 million) near Port Qasim in Karachi, Pakistan, which will have an annual capacity of 350 kilo tons.

The production of PE and polypropylene (PP) will go some way to satisfy the growing demand for plastics in Pakistan. The promoters also have an offtake agreement in place with Ravago of Belgium to import a portion of the production. Currently, there is no PE plant in the country which means that Pakistan imports all its PE and PP requirements. In this respect the proposed project once it gets off the ground will also save valuable hard currency for the country and provide employment opportunities across the supply chain.

In fact, the promoters project that as a result of import substitution, Pakistan should enjoy foreign exchange savings of about $250 million based on prevailing prices and import levels
The Trans Polymers Project comprises three phases, of which the PE plant will be the first phase of the development of a major Polymer Complex in Pakistan comprising polyethylene, naphtha and polypropylene. The total investment in the whole Polymer Complex will be in excess of 1.5 billion euro.
The project has attracted vital support from Saudi Arabia and other GCC-based investors, and European investors from Luxembourg and the UK.

Waleed Al-Tharman, the vice-chairman of Trans Polymers (UK) Limited and the president and chief executive officer of Al-Jafr Trading and Contracting Company from Saudi Arabia, in fact is both an equity investor and a co-initiator of the project.

Other GCC investors are currently in discussions with Trans Polymers (UK) Limited and Al-Tharman is confident that some of them will follow suit.

Similarly, the promoters have applied to the Jeddah-based Islamic Corporation for the Insurance of Investment and Export Credits (ICIEC), a member of the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) Group, for political risk insurance to cover various risks including equity.

Polyethylene (PE) is used for packaging, from textiles to fertilizers, and for the production of household articles, automotive and industrial parts, bottles and containers. According to the promoters, the proposed plant will satisfy a substantial part of Pakistan’s requirement for PE which is projected to grow at 7 percent to 8 percent per annum over the next few years.

At present, demand for PE in Pakistan is around 270,000 tons per annum, which is met through imports. The imports of PE and other polymers cost the country over $1 billion in hard currency in 2009. By the time the plant starts production, demand for PE alone is projected to be 570,000 tons per annum, which will effectively guarantee the plant a sustainable domestic market with excess capacity for exports.
The consumption of PE and PP currently in Pakistan per capita per population is a mere 1 kg, which is very low compared with 3kg for neighboring India and 7 kg for China. The global average is 10 kg; while the figure for industrialized western countries is 30-40 kg.

With the global economy slowly emerging out of recession and the recovery on track in many countries especially in the high GDP growth region of Asia, the petrochemical industry in particular is poised to expand especially in countries where there is huge latent and untapped demand. The case of PE and PP in Pakistan is one such case in point.

The proposed project has received the go-ahead from the government of Pakistan, which has granted various foreign investment incentives as well as favorable tariff concessions. The country, stress the promoters, has a favorable regime for foreign investments including 100 percent foreign equity ownership in all sectors, and full repatriation of royalty remittances, technical franchise fees, capital, profits and dividends to foreign investors.

According to the promoters, the project involves major international firms some of which will also co-invest in the project. Ineos Technology is the supplier of the licence and technology; Marubeni and Mitsui will supply the ethylene feedstock sourced from the GCC. The local Descon will provide engineering, construction and operations and management (O&M) services.

Technical feasibility, quality of engineering work and financial feasibility meet a strategic need for a developing country. Construction, commissioning and warranty testing of the plant is estimated to take 34 months and commercial production is expected by the fourth quarter of 2013.

The project, which will be located about 24 km away from Port Qasim and which will have access to a chemical jetty operated by Engro Vopak, should provide over 2,000 jobs during construction, and substantial employment opportunities, especially of skilled manpower, once upstream and downstream production commences.

The project promoters are Trans Polymers (UK) Limited, a private UK investment company comprising British, Pakistani, GCC, EU and Malaysian investors, and its Pakistani subsidiary, Trans Polymers (Pakistan) Limited.

The total project cost for the PE plant is Euro 520 million with a debt to equity ratio of 40:60. Of this 312 million euro will be project financing, which is largely in place, and the rest in equity financing, of which about 80 million euro have been committed by UK, Pakistani and GCC and other investors. Negotiations for the remaining portion of the equity are well advanced and the promoters expect financial closure for the project to take place by the end of this year.

To give further comfort to investors, the financing for the project is done through a Luxembourg holding company, and is coordinated by tax expert Claude Zimmer, managing director of Lux Global Trust Services, a firm specialized in complex private equity transactions, and Marc Theisen, partner, and Reinhard Krafft, investment expert at Theisen Law, which is pioneering Islamic finance transactions out of Luxembourg.

According to Marc Theisen, Luxembourg is an ideal domicile for such a complex international investment project giving investors a cross-border onshore platform which is tax-efficient and in a stable and safe legal environment, especially in times of global economic uncertainty.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Pakistan flood: We may see rise in polymers demand.

Pakistan could see a temporary surge in demand for polymers needed to house and feed over 4m people affected by deadly floods, the worst in 80 years, market sources said on Friday.

More than 1,500 people have been killed in a week of flooding that has swept away entire villages and inundated millions of acres of farm land, according to media reports.

Authorities and non-government organizations are scurrying to provide relief to 4m people across the flooded region, accessible mostly by air or boat.

“In the near term, we could see a rise in demand for polymers, notably polypropylene (PP) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) sheets for shelters, and polystyrene (PS) containers for food packaging [and fertilizers],” said a source close to a polymer producer.

However, in the longer term, demand for polymers could be hit due to the ravages wreaked on agricultural output, said a polymer trader.

“If...crops are decimated in the flood hit areas, it would mean less demand for raffia grade PP used in food-grain packaging, as Pakistan may be forced to import food grains,” he said.

None of the petrochemical plants in Pakistan have been heard to have been affected by the floods, sources said.

Pakistan Petrochemical Industry’s PS plant and Engro Polymers’ PVC plant are both located in the southern port city of Karachi, which has not been affected by the flooding so far, they said.