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India will remain a bright spot in petchem demand by 2025

Industry executives told the India Energy Week conference that India's petrochemical market will grow in 2025, despite the fact that global demand is still behind supply. This is due to a growing demand for household appliances, solar panels, and electric vehicle components.

Sanjay Khanna, director of refineries at Bharat Oil, said that the company is seeing a good demand locally in sectors such as propylene.

A S Sahney, chairman of Indian Oil, said that demand for oil is expected to be resilient in 2019.

Petrochemicals can be used as building blocks in a wide range of products, including plastics, pharmaceuticals, and paints.

Ganesh G. Gopalakrishnan is the global head of TotalEnergies petrochemicals trading. He said that there was a good demand in the automotive sector, while white goods are recovering.

The global petrochemical market margins will remain low for several more years due to the weak demand of China, which is the world's largest petrochemical consumer. There is also an excess supply coming from new plants in China and Middle East.

TotalEnergies Gopalakrishnan said that the industry was waiting for China to unveil its incentive plan in march. This could boost China's demand, and improve global margins on petrochemicals.

Pankaj Srivastava is an analyst with Rystad Energy. He said that while Indian refineries have avoided losses by producing their own petrochemical naphtha feedstock, margins for standalone plants that rely on imported feed have been negative over the past 3-4 years.

India continues to receive investments. Hardeep Singh Puri, India's oil minister, said that the country would receive $87 billion in investments over the next decade. This will be to meet the rising demand for petrochemicals.

He said India consumes between 25 and 30 million metric tonnes of petrochemicals annually and that the chemical and petrochemicals industry, valued at currently $220 billion, will grow to $300 billion in 2025.

Nayara Energy, Haldia Petrochemicals and other companies have already announced their plans to increase production.

Petronet LNG has built a complex of petrochemicals in Gujarat, which includes a 750,000-metric-ton-per-year propane dehydrogenation and 500,000-metric-ton-per-year polypropylene unit.

Akshay Kumar Sing, Chief Executive of Petronet LNG, said: "The downturn has always been cyclical. We hope margins recover in the next three years." (Reporting and editing by Florence Tan, Michael Perry, and Mohi Nrayan)

(source: Reuters)