S06 ORME 3 2020 Refining & Petrochems_Layout 1 21/04/2020 06:49 Page 24
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Refining & Petrochemicals
Slowing the
investment wave Chemical and oil companies are slashing capex, says Joseph Chang, global editor, ICIS Chemical Business, with additional reporting by Stefan Baumgarten, ICIS. N THE WAKE of the coronavirus and collapse in crude oil prices, chemical, oil and gas and midstream companies will all slash capital spending (capex) for growth projects to preserve cash. As a result, the global chemical investment wave looks to slow considerably in the years ahead. While major US chemical projects under construction should continue, the fall in Brent crude oil prices and the shrinking of the Brent/US Henry Hub natural gas ratio from the 30s to the mid-teens “puts into question the economics long term,” said Kevin Swift, chief economist of the American Chemistry Council (ACC), speaking in an ICIS webinar on the economic outlook.
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Saudi Aramco has the most ambitious petrochemical expansion plans of any company. ” “This creates an awful lot of uncertainty, and decision-makers don’t like uncertainty,” he added. This year, US-based Dow had already taken down its capex plan to US$1.5bn for 2020 from US$2bn in 2019. However, in an appearance on CNBC’s Mad Money programme with Jim Cramer, CEO Jim Fitterling said the company would struggle to meet even the lowered US$1.5bn capex target because of limitations on the movement of contractors and engineers given the coronavirus outbreak. In March, Shell announced the temporary suspension of work on its 1.5m tonne/year cracker under construction in Monaca, Pennsylvania to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. No timeframe was given for when work would resume. For Dow, after having paid down around US$2bn in debt in 2019, it
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Issue 3 2020
would like to pay off another US$500m-US$1bn in debt in 2020, said Fitterling. At the end of 2019, Dow had net debt of US$14.6bn. Dow is in the process of starting up its Texas-9 cracker expansion adding 500,000 tonnes/year of ethylene capacity in Freeport by midQ2. Among other project plans are a 130,000 tonne/year ethylene expansion in Western Canada by H1 2021 and a 600,000 tonne/year polyethylene (PE) plant on the US Gulf Coast for an H2 2022 start-up. Canada-based Methanex said it is evaluating all capital and operating spending, including its planned Geismar 3 project in Louisiana which would add 1.8m tonnes/year of methanol capacity.
Oil companies to pull back Major oil companies will also cut capex plans for 2020 and beyond in response to the collapse in oil prices. Importantly, many of these companies had aggressive plans for petrochemical capacity expansion, as they shifted their focus away from transportation fuel and towards chemicals for future growth. While oil companies have not yet specifically mentioned cuts to chemical projects, all investments should see an impact. Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest oil producer, is slashing 2020 capex from an expected US$35-40bn range indicated in its IPO prospectus, to a level of US$25-30bn. This is also down from capex of US$33bn in 2019. Aramco’s capex plans for 2021 and beyond are also under review. “As yet, no one knows precisely the impact on economic activity and energy demand from the coronavirus outbreak, especially in the longer term, and additional efficiencies may be required,” said Aramco chief financial officer Khalid al-Dabbagh, on the company’s Q4 earnings conference call. Saudi Aramco has the most ambitious petrochemical expansion plans of any company, with multiple new cracker and derivative projects in Saudi Arabia, China, India and the USA. It had planned to spend around US$100bn towards petrochemical expansions over a decade. US-based ExxonMobil said it is considering significant cuts to capex and operating expenses. The company is building a 1.8m tonne/year joint venture cracker complex with SABIC in Corpus Christi, Texas with a planned start-up in H1 2022, and is planning a cracker complex in China as well.