John Richardson’s Post

CHINA COULD EASILY MOVE TO ALMOST COMPLETE METHANOL self-sufficiency by 2025, the chart below indicates. In that year, our base case assumes 13.78m tonnes of imports. Assume just over half of a small amount of unconfirmed capacity goes ahead, raise operating rates by ten percentage points from a very low base-case average and imports fall to just 950,000 tonnes in 2025. I am not saying this will definitely happen, of course. What I am saying is China has the ability to hit much greater self-sufficiency across a wide range of products - https://lnkd.in/gwmQ46U. No less than 53% of total global net imports of methanol went to China in 2020, we estimate. As with many other products, therefore, if you take China largely of the import picture, exporters are in big trouble. In methanol the biggest losers would be the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Saudi Arabia and New Zealand. "This isn't going to happen because of the cost-per-tonne production costs of China's methanol plants," you might say. But China capacity and production decisions have always been mainly about wider economic and geopolitical objectives. This isn't going to change. #china

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