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Haldia Petrochemicals seeks regional Indian naphtha products amid Red Sea interruption, CEO states

India's Haldia Petrochemicals Ltd is wanting to source feedstock naphtha from domestic refiners to protect itself from volatile shipping expenses triggered by ship attacks in the Red Sea, the business's chief executive officer stated on Wednesday.

The company, which owns a naphtha cracker producing 700,000 metric loads per year in the eastern state of West Bengal, sources 50% of its feedstock from the Middle East and counts on regional refiners like Indian Oil, HPCL and BPCL for the rest of its feedstock requires.

While freight costs have actually now come off highs after spiking 30-40%, there is no certainty that costs will not increase again in the next 12 months, HPL's CEO Navanit Narayan informed .

It adds a lot of volatility to our imports and we are taking a look at domestic markets for purchasing feedstock, he added.

Clean Petroleum Item (CPP) tanker rates on the Middle East to Asia path have actually boiled down to about $70-$ 90 per metric lot in last week of March, compared to about $110 per lot earlier this year, trade sources stated.

Narayan stated the company utilizes lighter grades of naphtha as feedstock and that makes it tough to buy in big amounts from local refiners who process Russian crude.

Naphtha produced from Russian crude is somewhat heavier, while Middle East manufacturers like Abu Dhabi National Oil Business ( ADNOC) and Kuwait Petroleum Corp (KPC) supply high quality light naphtha, he included.

On petrochemical margins, Narayan stated overcapacity worldwide is weighing on revenues even though need for petrochemicals like paints and pipes is stable compared to last year.

He anticipates petrochemical margins in India to recover after the first quarter in 2025.

While the company exported a few of its polymers to South East Asia and Africa previously this year, he stated, export margins are not as rewarding at present.

A great deal of it depends upon healing in the Chinese economy ... likewise, the issue is a great deal of petrochemicals in Europe and Asia which count on old innovations are not shutting down, he said.

The industry as a whole will perform better if debt consolidation happens in next two or 4 years as is currently occurring in Japan, Narayan included.

(source: Reuters)