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ENERGYzing the European chemical industry HLG Chemicals Ad-hoc group Energy , Feedstock and Logistics 15 January, 2008 P Claes, Essenscia ENERGYzing the European chemical industry Energy is vital to the chemical industry - as raw material and fuel
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ENERGYzing the European chemical industry HLG ChemicalsAd-hoc group Energy, Feedstock and Logistics15 January, 2008 P Claes, Essenscia
ENERGYzing the European chemical industry • Energy is vital to the chemical industry - as raw material and fuel • Industry’s essential need: Access to competitively-priced electricity and gas • Impact of climate and energy policies on EU competitiveness • Energy efficiency is of prior importance for the industry • Chemical products help to save energy
ENERGYzing the European chemical industry • Energy is vital to the chemical industry - as raw material and fuel • Industry’s essential need: Access to competitively-priced electricity and gas • Impact of EU climate and energy policy on competitiveness • Energy efficiency is of prior importance for the industry • Chemical products help to save energy
For chemicals, energy is more than a fuel EU chemical* industry energy consumption by source Source: Eurostat *including pharmaceuticals
Energy costs and energy policy matter for important building blocks of the chemical industry
Energy is vital to the chemical industry – as raw material and fuel • Chemical industry is the most important energy consumer among manufacturing sectors • Energy serves not only as fuel but also as feedstock: oil and gas are used as raw material for higher value added products. • The chemical industry is globally active, highly integrated and depends on very energy intensive building blocks
ENERGYzing the European chemical industry • Energy is vital to the chemical industry - as raw material and fuel • Industry’s essential need: Access to competitively-priced electricity and gas • Impact of EU climate and energy policy on competitiveness • Energy efficiency is of prior importance for the industry • Chemical products help to save energy
EU electricity prices: A disadvantage in global competition General Industrial Power Price (in €/MWh) EU range * EU average * = 45 (*) Estimates for the European chlor-alkali industry Sources: Prochemics based on Information from IEA; Eurostat; EIA (2006).
Electricity prices traded in the European exchanges are on the rise Increase 2001-2006 ~ +110% Source: Prochemics based on Information from EEX (electricity base prices). Note: These prices do not necessarily reflect prices paid by chlorine producers.
EU gas prices: A disadvantage in global competition Global Natural Gas Costs – 1st Quarter 2007($US per million BTUs) Germany: $7.60 Russia: $1.50 UK: $8.65 Canada: $7.10 Belarus: $3.15 Belgium: $8.50 Ukraine: $3.60 South Korea: $8.80 USA: $7.20 Iran: $1.25 Libya: $1.00 Japan: $8.70 China: $6.30 Qatar: $1.80 Mexico: $6.85 Oman: $1.00 India: $3.70 Saudi Arabia: $0.75 Trinidad: $1.65 Brazil : $4.90 Bolivia: $1.85 Argentina: $4.85 Source: ACC
Industry’s essential need: Access to competitively-priced electricity and gas • Energy prices are key to competitiveness • While oil has in principle global price levels, electricity and gas remain national/regional markets (gas has the potential to become a global market) • EU electricity and gas prices are a competitive disadvantage for EU industry
ENERGYzing the European chemical industry • Energy is vital to the chemical industry - as raw material and fuel • Industry’s essential need: Access to competitively-priced electricity and gas • Impact of climate and energy policies on EU competitiveness • Energy efficiency is of prior importance for the industry • Chemical products help to save energy
Competitive energy markets are essential EU energy markets are not competitive • Access to grids, gas storage and cross-border connections for non-incumbents difficult • Few energy suppliers dominate the markets Third package is an important step • Cefic supports the EC Third Package and call for its rapid adoption and implementation. • Cefic calls for improvements to the Third Package in key areas to ensure its effectiveness. • Cefic calls for transitional measures until energy markets are competitive.
Climate change policies cause energy prices to rise Impact of CO2 costs on electricity prices Source: Prochemics based on Information from DGEMP of the Ministiere de l’Economie, de Finances et de l’Industrie, France (2003). Note: These prices do not necessarily reflect prices paid by chlorine producers.
What drives electricity prices… ? Development of the certificate prices and electricity prices in Germany – first trading period 2005-2006 Certificates Electricity
EU-25 EU-15 Use of renewables in the European chemical industry Use of renewables in the European chemical industry as raw material (2003) Chemical Industry ~6.4 million t Other industries ~2.6 million t 74.1 million t petrochemical and about 6.4 million t renewable raw materials are used in the EU-25 chemical industry in 2003, i.e. roughly 8% of the raw materials are renewable raw materials Source: German Agency Renewable Resources
ENERGYzing the European chemical industry • Energy is vital to the chemical industry - as raw material and fuel • Industry’s essential need: Access to competitively-priced electricity and gas • Impact of EU climate and energy policy on competitiveness • Energy efficiency is of prior importance for the industry • Chemical products help to save energy
EU Chemical industry is leading in CO2 efficiency gains Chemical industry greenhouse gas emissions per production: EU versus US
To ensure overall GLOBAL sustainability….minimise measures that stimulate investment leakage to most CO2 inefficient regions Country CO2 / GDP efficiency indexed to Japan = 1.0 Data source: IEA 2006
Global comparison: EU chemical industry most energy efficient
Energy efficiency is of prior importance for the industry • Energy and resource efficiency is a means for competitiveness • The chemical industry has decoupled production growth and energy use (e.g. technological breakthroughs, diffusion of CHP) • Timing of energy efficiency measures often depends on life-time of major assets rather than energy prices • The European chemical industry, overall, is more energy and CO2 efficient than other world regions. The current EU ETS design encourages growth in carbon-intensive countries. Delocalisation harms global environmental aims.
ENERGYzing the European chemical industry • Energy is vital to the chemical industry - as raw material and fuel • Industry’s essential need: Access to competitively-priced electricity and gas • Impact of EU climate and energy policy on competitiveness • Energy efficiency is of prior importance for the industry • Chemical products help to save energy
Innovation in chemicals is contributing to fight climate change Energy neutral housing • High-performance insulation materials • Solar panelling and photoelectric cells • Heat-absorbing wall-board material can reduce a building’s energy consumption by 15% to 32% The “Three-Liter House” Source: BASF
Chemical products support other sectors to tackle climate change Cutting back emissions in transport • Energy efficient tyres lower rolling resistance thereby reducing GHG emissions of cars by 5% • Lightweight, high-strength plastic components replace metal and save weight for greater fuel efficiency in cars • New jet aircrafts are making increased use of plastic and carbon fibre composite materials – achieving major emissions cuts in air transport • Making fuel cells commercially viable • Smart coatings reduce drag through the fouling of a ship’s hull
Chemical products help to save energy • Chemical industry saves energy through innovative solutions for downstream users. Chemical products save at least twice the CO2 used in their production. • Curtailing growth of the chemical industry through absolute CO2 reduction targets harms global environmental aims.
The way forward to ENERGYze the European chemical industry • ACTIONS NEEDED • Competitive energy markets are essential: The Energy Package must be strengthened, not weakened Beyond what the Energy Package will achieve: • Market dominance: Provide guidance to national regulators on effective measures to prevent abuse of market power. • Long-term contracts: Workable guidelines on long-term contracts, enabling consumers to enter into long-term supply contracts. • Transitional measures to allow access to affordable energy for energy-intensive industries until energy markets are competitive.
The way forward to ENERGYze the European chemical industry • ACTIONS NEEDED • As long as there is no international agreement on climate policy, the EU ETS design must not put unilateral constraints on globally competing industry. • Special contribution of the chemical industry to energy and ghg efficiency in economy and manufacturing must be recognised.
The way forward to ENERGYze the European chemical industry • ACTIONS NEEDED • Chemical industry uses renewable raw materials for some of its processes and is an important actor with regard to the development of renewable energies. • EU legislation must not favour the use of renewable resources for energy generationover their industrial use • The promotion of renewable energies should adhere to key principles: cost-efficiency, sustainability, technology-neutrality • EU legislation should provide for national exemption measures for energy-intensive industries to alleviate the cost burden and thereby guard international competitiveness