China blow to recycling boosts $185 billion US plastic bet

epa05691542 A picture made available on 30 December 2016 shows used plastic bottles piled up at a sorting and collection site in Shijingshan district of Beijing, China, 09 December 2016. Each day, an army of tens of thousands of scavengers runs along the streets of Beijing hauling all kind of materials that can be recycled. The Chinese capital has no organized recyling program, so the scavengers do that task. The local government is closing the informal markets, and the scavengers - mainly migrants from rural areas - are afraid that the authorities could create a metropolitan recycling system by 2020, so their jobs are increasingly at risk.  EPA/ROLEX DELA PENA

Bloomberg

China is upending the global plastics market. The world’s biggest user of scrap has stopped accepting shiploads of other countries’ plastic trash as it phases in a new ban. That’s bad news for the recycling industry, as China has been a major consumer of salvaged materials it processes into resin that ends up in pipe, carpets, bottles and other cogs of modern life.
China has begun buying brand new plastic to replace all the recycled scrap—and that’s great news for US chemical
makers such as DowDuPont Inc., which are scrambling to find markets for millions of tons of new production amid an industry investment binge. US exports of one common plastic are expected to quintuple by 2020.
“It’s a good time to be bringing on some new assets,” Mark Lashier, CEO of Chevron Phillips Chemical Co., said in an interview as he marked the opening of two polyethylene plants in Old Ocean, Texas. “If you pull recycled plastic out, that market demand is going to increase.”
China is undoing decades of effort that built a massive scrap recycling industry—the cheapest way to produce plastic products for its growing economy. The country accounted for 51 percent of the world’s plastic scrap imports last year, with the biggest contribution coming from the US, according to the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries, an international trade group.

Supply Shift
Now China is changing course, telling the World Trade Organization in July that it will stop accepting imports of used plastics and paper by Jabuary 1 as the nation takes steps to clean up its industrial pollution. The China ban could shift about 2 percent of global polyethylene plastics supply from recycled to new material, Vincent Andrews, an analyst at Morgan Stanley, said in a report. The country has already halved its purchases of scrap polyethylene from a 2014 peak, he said.
The US is the only country in a position to quickly fill the gap, said Jonas Oxgaard, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.
That’s because the US has become the cheapest place in the world to make plastic, thanks to a fracking boom that’s created a glut of natural gas, the main feedstock for manufacturing. Taking advantage of low gas prices, chemical producers have invested an unprecedented $185 billion to build new capacity in the US, according to the American Chemistry Council, an industry group.
Natural gas prices at $3.50 per million British thermal units would be about $20 a barrel on an oil equivalent basis, Royal Dutch Shell Plc said during an investor briefing. West Texas Intermediate crude futures traded at $57.40 a barrel at 5:04 p.m. Singapore time.
Exporting high-value resins to China instead of cheap scrap could help chip away at the US’s $250 billion trade deficit with the nation—a goal that has been on the top of President Donald Trump’s agenda.
“Some of the patterns of production we saw 15 years ago are starting to change quite rapidly,” said Simon Tay, chairman of Singapore Institute of International Affairs. “The two-way flow between US and China becomes much stronger.”
About 30 percent of North America’s recyclables were historically processed in China, according to Morgan Stanley’s Andrews. China is creating a void in the market for used plastic that will have a “devastating impact” on recycling worldwide, according to the recycling trade group.
So far, domestic markets for used polyethylene, PET and polypropylene remain healthy, said Brent Bell, vice president for recycling at Waste Management Inc., North America’s largest trash hauler.
Even so, some recycling programmes are beginning to come under stress because China has stopped issuing licenses to import scrap plastics ahead of the Jan. 1 ban, Bernstein’s Oxgaard said. Global prices for the waste have already dropped 10 percent, said Aloke Lohia, chairman of Indorama Ventures Pcl, which buys used plastic bottles for its processing plants in Europe, Mexico and Thailand.
The US West Coast appears to be hardest hit. In the area around Portland, Oregon, for instance, some recyclers are limiting the types of plastics they will accept.

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