Korea to ease rules for petrochem industry M&As, plant closures

The recent surge in ethylene margins could delay the sector's restructuring, say industry officials

Lotte Chemical's petrochemical complex in Yeosu National Industrial Complex, South Jeolla Province
Lotte Chemical's petrochemical complex in Yeosu National Industrial Complex, South Jeolla Province
Kyung-Min Kang and Hyung-Kyu Kim 2
2024-12-24 14:33:46 Kkm1026@hankyung.com
Petrochemicals

South Korea will ease regulations and offer incentives to facilitate the restructuring of domestic petrochemical makers battling a global supply glut and overcapacity in China and the Middle East, said the Ministry of Economy and Finance on Monday.

The government hopes a relaxation in the rules will spur these companies' mergers and acquisitions and plant closures and allow them to shift into high-end, specialty chemicals such as copolyesters and acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and away from basic chemicals such as ethylene.

As South Korea’s leading petrochemical companies are forecast to swing to losses this year, Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok announced a string of measures to bolster the sector's competitiveness at a ministerial meeting.

The measures include providing 3 trillion won ($2.1 billion) in policy financing such as low-cost loans and payment guarantees for plant shutdowns and sales. Such incentives will also be offered to future joint ventures and M&A deals.

Additionally, the government will extend the suspension of import tariffs on naphtha, feedstock for petrochemical products, and oil used at naphtha cracking centers (NCC) by one year to the end of 2025.

It will refund import duties charged on liquefied natural gas used for industrial materials.

The Korea Fair Trade Commission also pledged to review their M&As and plant closures faster than normal.

The measures were unveiled as Korean petrochemical makers are striving to jettison their basic chemicals plants to stem losses. 

The country's four largest petrochemical manufacturers – LG Chem Ltd., Lotte Chemical Corp., Kumho Petrochemical Co. and Hanwha Solutions Corp. – reported consolidated losses of a combined 417.0 billion won in the third quarter. That compared with the 39.0 billion won shortfall in the fourth quarter of 2023.

Yeochun NCC's petrochemical plant in Yeosu National Industrial Complex, South Jeolla Province
Yeochun NCC's petrochemical plant in Yeosu National Industrial Complex, South Jeolla Province

The industry is watching closely to see whether such policy efforts will lead to the shutdown or sale of Yeochun NCC (YNCC), the country’s No. 3 ethylene producer.

Restructuring the loss-making joint venture between Hanwha Solutions and DL Chemical could trigger a shake-up in the sector, said some industry officials.

But Hanwha and DL are said to have no plans to sell YNCC in the immediate future.

Those industrial officials pointed out that the government measures are not attractive enough to lead to voluntary production cuts.

Further, a rebound in ethylene margins, which have more than doubled over the past two months, could delay their restructuring.

“We’re stuck in a dilemma where one company’s production cuts benefit another,” said an industry official. "To facilitate M&As, we need stronger incentives.”

Write to Kyung-Min Kang and Hyung-Kyu Kim at Kkm1026@hankyung.com
 


Yeonhee Kim edited this article.

Lotte to liquidate rubber JV in Malaysia, sell overseas assets for $1 bn

Lotte to liquidate rubber JV in Malaysia, sell overseas assets for $1 bn

Lotte Ube Synthetic Rubber’s plant in Malaysia (File photo downloaded from Lotte Ube Synthetic Rubber’s website) South Korea’s No. 2 petrochemical manufacturer Lotte Chemical Corp. plans to liquidate its rubber joint venture in Malaysia to scale back its basic chemicals busine

Lotte to halve basic chemicals in portfolio for profitability

Lotte to halve basic chemicals in portfolio for profitability

Lotte Chemical petrochemical complex in Yeosu, South Korea (File photo, courtesy of Lotte Chemical) South Korea’s No. 2 petrochemicals manufacturer Lotte Chemical Corp. is set to more than halve its basic chemicals business by 2030 in its portfolio while strengthening advanced materials a

LG Chem to close base chemical styrene monomer business

LG Chem to close base chemical styrene monomer business

LG Chem's petrochemicals complex in Yeosu, South Jeolla Province LG Chem Ltd., South Korea's No. 1 petrochemical company, will shut down its styrene monomer (SM) production line this month and is mulling closing another base chemical production facility in the country to withdraw from the gener

Lotte puts Lotte Chemical Titan in Malaysia on market

Lotte puts Lotte Chemical Titan in Malaysia on market

Lotte Chemical Titan's petrochemicals facility Lotte Chemical Corp., South Korea’s No. 2 petrochemicals company, has embarked on the process of selling its Malaysian unit Lotte Chemical Titan Holdings. Meanwhile, its rival LG Chem Ltd. is in talks with Kuwait Petroleum Corp. to sell a sta

Lotte Chemical sells JV stakes in China, eyes other profitable markets

Lotte Chemical sells JV stakes in China, eyes other profitable markets

South Korea’s Lotte Chemical Corp. has sold its entire stakes in joint ventures with Chinese partners as the Korean company faces a supply glut amid weak demand in the world’s second-largest economy.The petrochemical unit of Lotte Group, Korea’s fifth-largest conglomerate, re

LG Chem seeks to sell 2nd NCC facility in Korea in face of China’s ascent

LG Chem seeks to sell 2nd NCC facility in Korea in face of China’s ascent

LG Chem's NCC facility in Yeosu, South Jeolla Province in South Korea (Courtesy of LG Chem)  LG Chem Ltd. has embarked on a process to sell its core naphtha cracking center (NCC) in South Korea, estimated at about 3 trillion won ($2.3 billion), as part of its business reshuffle to bolster

LG to slim down petrochem as Chinese rivals creep up

LG to slim down petrochem as Chinese rivals creep up

LG Chem plans to offload marginal businesses South Korea’s LG Chem Ltd. is speeding up restructuring efforts to sell or downsize uncompetitive businesses, with an aim to focus on three growth drivers: battery materials, eco-friendly businesses and new drug development.Earlier this month,

Hanwha, DL Chemical to split up two-decade-old YNCC joint venture

Hanwha, DL Chemical to split up two-decade-old YNCC joint venture

Hanwha and DL Chemical are moving to end their partnership and walk separate ways Yeochun NCC Co., a leading South Korean petrochemical producer, will split up after its two owners – Hanwha Group and DL Group – have agreed to end their partnership on the joint venture after more tha

Korea petchem shares shine on China hopes, valuations

Korea petchem shares shine on China hopes, valuations

Lotte Chemical's petrochemical complex in Yeosu, South Korea South Korean petrochemical companies’ stocks rose as investors bought them at a bargain on expectations for Chinese demand recovery despite rising production costs from soaring oil prices.Shares in petrochemical producers jumped

Korea’s YNCC shuts petrochem plant after explosion kills four

Korea’s YNCC shuts petrochem plant after explosion kills four

YNCC plant hit by a blast YEOSU, South Jeolla Province -- Yeochun NCC (YNCC) Co., South Korea’s major petrochemical producer, shut down one of its plants on Friday after an explosion at the complex killed four people and injured four.The blast hit the No. 3 plant including a naphtha crack

(* comment hide *}