World
Petrochemicals reports include detailed information on the capacity,
supply/demand, and trade for 55 petrochemicals and plastics and 12
refinery products. Capacity information is also available for an
additional 77 products. The reports provide a worldwide review of
the market, with specific detail provided for more than 60 countries
and regions.
These reports provide a focused analysis of the current and projected
market conditions on a global basis. This data is available in printed
and electronic forms and can be easily adapted for use in business
plans and marketing reports.
The program covers the following:
Major Report Features Include:
- Supply/demand data with five years of history and 10 year forecasts.
- Announced and speculative capacity additions.
- Detail on producers' locations, processes, and capacities worldwide
from historical, current, and future perspectives.
- Complete product balances for all major petrochemical products,
which provide a fully integrated analysis of raw materials, intermediates,
and end-use products.
- Detailed trade data showing global product flow and individual
country balances. Trade matrices are also included for selected
major chemicals.
The reports are organized by product, with detailed capacity, production,
consumption, and trade data provided by region and country. Each
country discussion includes a review of the local markets and producers
and a product balance by company, location, and country. Five-year
histories and 10-year forecasts of supply/demand and capacity data
are provided by product and country.
Crude oil and natural gas supply/demand, as well as the demand for
petrochemical feedstocks, is covered only in the Feedstocks segment.
The Feedstocks segment also includes a petrochemical complexes report
that shows primary petrochemical capacities by site, worldwide. Feedstock
supply tables display the use of natural gas, natural gas liquids,
refinery streams, coal, and other hydrocarbon feed streams. The Feedstocks
Producers Table lists the products, locations, processes, and historical
and future capacities to produce that product, but does not include
capacity-derived derivative equivalents.
|