Samsung Engineering awarded USD 230 mln contract to build HDPE plant in western India

(Plastemart) -- Samsung Engineering Co., South Korea's largest industrial plant builder, has said that it has won a USD 230 million order to build a high-density polyethylene (HDPE) plant in western India. Under the deal with ONGC Petro-additions Ltd. (OPaL), a unit of India's state-run Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. (ONGC), Samsung Engineering will build the plant with an annual production capacity of 340 KT of HDPE by August 2013. The plant will be built at the special economic zone in Dahej, Gujarat.


MRC

China's manufacturing growth eased in April

(ICIS) -- China's manufacturing growth eased in April as the government's measures to tighten monetary policy started to show signs of helping to slow domestic demand, industry sources said on Tuesday.


The Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) declined by 0.5 percentage points from March to 52.9% in April, according to a report from the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing (CFLP) released on 1 May. The PMI fell after rebounding in March from three consecutive months of slowdowns.


The index for new orders fell by 1.4 percentage points month on month to 53.8% in April, with the import order index at 50.6%, a fall of 1.4 percentage points. The export index was 51.3%, a slide of 1.2 percentage points, according to data from CFLP.


The production index was 55.3% in April, a fall of 0.4 percentage points month on month, while the purchasing index dropped by 2.1 percentage points to 66.2%, according to the data.


China has raised interest rates four times since last October and has hiked the reserve requirement ratio ten times since early 2010.


MRC

Dow Chemical failed to restart its No 1 cracker at Terneuzen

(ICIS) -- Dow Chemical failed to restart its No 1 cracker at Terneuzen, the Netherlands, over the 30 April-1 May weekend following planned maintenance, a company source said on Tuesday. ⌠During the start-up there was an issue detected and [the cracker's restart] has been postponed until this equipment is opened up and repaired, the source said. The cracker will be restarted as soon as the issue is resolved, the source added.


The cracker, which has the capacity to produce 580 KTa of ethylene (C2), is one of three that Dow Chemical operates at its Terneuzen site.


Planned maintenance work on the cracker, as well as on the associated butadiene (BD) extraction unit, began around 11 March.


The 180 KTa BD extraction unit has already been restarted and is expected to ramp up operating rates upon the successful restart of the cracker, according to another company source.


MRC

US propylene prices are at all-time highs

(ICIS) -- Record US prices for propylene could encourage more producers to crack larger amounts of propane and butane, a consultant said on Tuesday. US propylene prices are at all-time highs, and more records could be set in the upcoming weeks.


In April, US propylene contracts rose by 15 cents/lb (USD 331/tonne, EUR 221/tonne) in a record-breaking settlement that put polymer-grade propylene (PGP) at 87.50 cents/lb and chemical-grade propylene (CGP) at 86.00 cents/lb.


For May, US propylene producers nominated increases as high as 12.50 cent/lb.


This price run-up is threatening margins for several propylene derivatives. For integrated producers, making more propylene could help protect those margins.


MRC

US April ethylene up 6.5%

(ICIS) -- US ethylene contracts for April were mostly settled at 57.25 cents/lb (USD 1.262/tonne, EUR 846/tonne), rising by 3.50 cents/lb from March on higher spot prices and increased production costs, market sources said on Tuesday. US ethylene contracts usually settle at the beginning of the month for the previous calendar month.


Two settlement participants confirmed the April increase that put contracts at 57.25 cents/lb. The April increase is the third in as many months for the US monomer.


Ethylene in March settled at 53.75 cents/lb, rising by nearly 10% from February, also as a result of increased spot prices and higher production costs.


MRC