The impact of the coronavirus lockdowns on the oil, gas and chemicals industries’ integrated value chains is radically shifting relationships and profitability. It is also making planning virtually impossible.
Shell CEO Ben van Beurden also said this week that the environment around refining and chemical margins remains challenging.
“The key to the profitability of our chemicals plants and refineries is their integrated value chain from their feedstocks to the multiple products they produce,” he said.
“The demand volatility of a particular product can have a broader impact on the operational capability of the integrated value chain. For example, a reduction in the demand for jet fuel at a refinery can impact the viability of the entire refinery. Looking ahead, we expect significant price and margin volatility in the short to medium term.”
Companies are also confronted by recessionary trends in the markets and in the countries in which they operate.
“This volatility presents a unique challenge for oil and gas producers, with the need to balance the requirement for cash today, with appropriate investment across the portfolio to generate cash tomorrow,” van Beurden said.
Oil, gas and chemicals companies are seeking to preserve cash in extraordinarily difficult times while maintaining a level of business that serves them and their customers best.
Upholding operations in these multiple value chains is key. But we are seeing refinery run downs and closures alongside the squeeze on chemical plant operating rates.
Operators of Europe’s crackers and the plants downstream from them are working on shifting sands.
ICIS analysis, updated from only a few weeks ago, looks at the European cracker output under threat from reduced refined products demand, for instance. The estimate now is that, potentially 37 per cent of the region’s propylene capacity is impacted, 37 per cent of benzene, and 31 per cent of ethylene. This is apart from the pressure put on production of these vitally important chemical feedstocks from generally weakened downstream demand.
BASF has shuttered facilities serving markets closely related to automobile production. Across the group, its plants are operating at more than 60 per cent, management said.
Dow on Thursday said it is idling five polyethylene (PE)/elastomers facilities in the Americas for at least one month, and it is running reduced global propylene oxide (PO) and methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) rates until industrial demand improves. It is running its siloxanes production at reduced rates globally.
ExxonMobil said on Friday that volumes at its chemicals division were down in the first quarter for its non-US chemicals operations while margins for the segment were lower in the quarter, year on year.
US chemicals operations were constrained by overcapacity and the volumes from newly installed US Gulf Coast plants, but margins had remained firm because of cheaper quarter to quarter feedstock costs.
LyondellBasell said that its olefins & polyolefins segments – in the Americas and Europe/rest of the world – had experienced consumer-driven demand for polymers used in packaging and medical products but that the impact of the pandemic and low crude oil prices would continue to impact its businesses in the second quarter.
“Weak demand from markets for industrial and durable products is expected to persist,” it said.