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Ethylene production and market dynamics

Taanvi Sawhnay by Taanvi Sawhnay
June 18, 2025
in Latest News, Petrochemicals, World
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Ethylene production and market dynamics

Photo Credit: https://www.chemicalweekly.com/

Ethylene – the simplest olefin – is the biggest petrochemical volume and value and a main driver of the industry’s development, profitability and funding. It underpins the industry by allowing the manufacturing of a numerous variety of products that discover use as plastics, fibres, detergents, pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, and so on. Along with propylene, it’s a barometer for the petrochemical industry as a whole.

Global ethylene manufacturing latest exceeds 225-mt and is from a handful of feedstocks. The economics of its manufacturing is basically intended with by the price of this resource – that is mostly hydrocarbon, as of now – even though scale, location and operational efficiencies play a role.

Broad variety of derivatives

Ethylene’s versatility and reactivity comes from the double bond in the molecule. It can be polymerized, epoxidized, chlorinated, hydro chlorinated, hydrogenated, and hydrolyzed to yield derivatives that, in flip, are amenable to in addition chemical and physical conversions.

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Some of the essential main derivatives of ethylene are:

  • Polyethylene (PE) [which come in three ‘flavours’ – high density (HDPE), low density (LDPE) and linear low density (LLDPE)];
  • Ethylene dichloride (EDC) and vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) [which are precursors to make polyvinyl chloride (PVC), another large volume thermoplastic];
  • Ethylene oxide (EO) [which serves numerous end-uses including as raw material for surfactants that have cleansing and emulsification properties] and monoethylene glycol (MEG) [which primarily serves as feedstock for making polyesters];
  • Styrene [which can be polymerized and copolymerized to yield numerous commodity and engineering plastics]; and
  • Alpha-olefins [of varying chain lengths used for making surfactants, synthetic lubes, etc.]

Steam cracking

Steam cracking of saturated hydrocarbons is the main source of ethylene (and different olefins). This is generally completed in furnaces running at high temperatures (750-800°C), and plants are designed to deal with some of constraining conditions. These consist of a requirement to deliver significant heat at very high temperature; need for short residence time (0.1-0.6 seconds) to minimize next reactions; required to quickly quench the furnace gases to freeze product composition; and perform tough separations of close-boiling additives to get distinctly pure olefins (purity of ethylene is especially important to make PEs).

The hydrocarbon feedstocks used consist of ethane, propane, butane, and naphtha (acquired as a mid-boiling reduce from refining of crude oils). The lighter the feedstock, the lower the hardness of cracking operations; better the percentage of ethylene; lower the capital expenditure; and better the economics. The lowest cost producers of ethylene are the ethane-based crackers, which includes the ones in the Middle East (based on natural gas processing) or in the US (shale gas). Naphtha crackers, which dominate production in Asia and Europe, are usually higher up the ethylene cost curve.

The compelling economics of gas-based totally ethylene manufacturing has led to the appearance of two main centres today – in the Middle East (e.g., Saudi Arabia, Iran, UAE, Qatar), and North America (USA and Canada). Given that ethylene costs also account for a suggestive portion of the cash costs of main ethylene derivatives, it is no wonder that those regions also are hubs for their manufacturing. Very lately, cracker operators elsewhere (together with in India and China) have also turned to cracking ethane (regardless of having little or no access domestically) and had been tying up supplies (primary from the US) and reconfiguring crackers to handle this lighter feedstock.

Naphtha crackers, but, have their place. They manufacture a broader variety of products, except ethylene and propylene, along with better olefins and aromatics, that may be valorized to make a large significant to usual plant economics.

Crackers also are designed to be adaptable with flexibility in feedstock – switching among gas and liquids, depending on the dynamics of feedstock price, availability changes, and products demand and pricing.

Methanol as feedstock

An alternate technology that has gained momentum in the final decade is methanol-to-olefins (MTO). This technology is located only in China and comes in two avatars: a simpler configuration, especially in coastal China, is primarily based on imported, gas-based methanol; and a extra complex version, in coal-manufacturing regions in the hinterland, with captive methanol manufacturing from coal (coal-to-olefins, CTO). The economics of ethylene manufactured by way of CTO/MTO come somewhere among the ethane- and naphtha-based crackers, although it relies upon at the price of crude oil. CTO is energy-intensive, and the economics will worsen have to a carbon penalty be imposed by regulators. While a significant portion of new ethylene capacity in China in recent times has been based on this route, no other nation has gone down this path.

Reducing the carbon footprint

The carbon footprints of ethylene crackers vary, relying at the feedstock combination that goes into them, but usually between 1.4-1.8 tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) is released per ton of ethylene produced. Anticipating global ethylene manufactured in 2023 turned into round 177-mt, this olefin alone represents a carbon footprint of round 260-mt of CO2.

The approaches to lower this footprint may be widely categorized into three categories: change in the feedstock that goes into a cracker; changes in the procedures, consisting of electrification (with the electricity being renewable or non-fossil based); and capture of the CO2 released and its sequestration.

Among the feedstock switches is a one primarily based on bioethanol, and is now practiced in a few plants, drastically in Brazil wherein sugarcane-based ethanol is reasonably and considerable. India too has one bio-ethylene plant primarily based on this route (some have closed) to make EO/MEG. Expansions were constrained by using bad economics vis-à-vis traditional routes and is anticipated to stay a niche for making PE and EO/MEG, notwithstanding its decrease carbon footprint.

Current efforts to cope with the mounting trouble of plastic waste by chemical recycling is giving another alternative to lower the carbon footprint of crackers. The most unusual route includes converting plastic waste into a hydrocarbon-including pyrolysis oil, which can be upgraded to function as co-feed to a naphtha cracker. The technology is still in its early stages and there are no crackers that basically run on this waste-derived feed, however it does afford olefins with a lower carbon footprint. A ‘mass balance’ approach is a useful way of allocating the advantages so derived to a fraction of this output.

Another decarbonization effort includes electrification of crackers – substituting the high thermal power required with renewable electricity (solar and wind) – offering up to 95% decrease in carbon footprint. The first venture to do this are in demonstration stage and the result seem encouraging. Deployment at industrial scale is a couple of years away and ramp up by rebuilding of existing crackers and new builds will must wait until the following decade. An interesting growth, nonetheless within the making plans stages, includes coupling a cracker to a Small Modular Nuclear Reactor, as the power needs and supply can be balanced.

Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) is an alternative as well however will only work in regions geographically lucky to have nearby underground reservoirs or depleted oilfields (India does no longer appear to be).

But decarbonizing ethylene manufacturing is not only a technical challenge; it needs including policy and financial help. Lately growth on this the front aren’t encouraging and a world-scale ethylene venture in Canada by industry foremost – announced as a ‘net-zero’ cracker – has been put on the back-burner in largely due policy uncertainties. Given the size of the ethylene industry, and the technological and commercial challenges, transitioning its manufacturing to a more sustainable path, will be a slow and difficult technique.

Shifting dynamics

While global ethylene capacity has endured to develop regularly, and could keep to accomplish that, an intensive shift in international order has taken place. Europe, once the world’s main regional manufacturer, with greater than quarter of capacity, has been overtaken by the Middle East, US and Asia (except China).

Subsequently, China overtook everybody, with an unfamiliar of rate of development. Fast forward to 2040, and China is still anticipated to still dominate at the same time as striving for self-sufficiency on the ethylene derivative level and continuing to invest in ethylene production.

Elsewhere in Asia, things have turned more challenging, and manufacturers are grappling with decreasing or near-zero growth domestic markets, and decreased alternatives for exports.
India remains an exception and will hold to need at least one world-scale cracker consistent with year for the foreseeable future.

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Taanvi Sawhnay

Taanvi Sawhnay

I’m Taanvi Sawhnay, known as Tan, a professional blogger with a deep interest in the global chemical industry. I’ve spent years writing for various platforms, delivering insightful analysis and up-to-date news. At ChemDive, I share my knowledge and passion, making complex industry trends accessible to professionals, academics, and enthusiasts alike. My goal is to engage readers with clear, informative content while keeping them informed about the latest developments in the chemical world.

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