logo
EU to set up Critical Chemical Alliance to secure supply chains

EU to set up Critical Chemical Alliance to secure supply chains

Hindustan Times5 hours ago
* EU to set up Critical Chemical Alliance to secure supply chains
Critical Chemical Alliance to tackle supply chain dependencies and distortions
*
EU chemical production faces competition from cheaper U.S. and Chinese rivals
*
Commission to expand state aid and simplify rules for chemicals industry
By Julia Payne
BRUSSELS, - The European Commission will work with EU member states and the chemicals sector to support production of chemicals identified as critical for Europe's industrial supply chains, the EU executive said on Tuesday. It said it will establish later this year a Critical Chemical Alliance, bringing together the Commission, member states, and various stakeholders as part of a wider plan to revive Europe's chemicals industry
The chemical alliance will "identify critical production sites needing policy support and tackle trade issues like supply chain dependencies and distortions," the Commission said in a statement. The move mirrors another alliance set up to identify metals and minerals key for the energy transition. The EU then set targets for mining, processing and recycling of 17 strategic materials.
Chemicals are a fundamental input for nearly all industries from textiles and defence to tech and account for 1.2 million direct jobs in the EU. However, chemical production plunged during the COVID-19 pandemic and it has not fully recovered in the face of competition with U.S. and Chinese rivals that benefit from significantly cheaper energy and production costs.
Commission officials said more than 20 chemical sites have closed over the last two years, with petrochemicals and ammonia "under severe pressure".
"First and foremost, there is the issue of sovereignty: keeping our steam crackers," European Commission Executive Vice President and industry commissioner Stephane Sejourne told reporters.
Steam crackers, a unit in petrochemical plants, produce building block chemicals ethylene and propylene, which are used in everything from plastic food packaging and rubber to car headlights and fleece hoodies. The EU has around 40 steam crackers. On Monday, chemicals giant Dow said it planned to shut two plants in Germany and one in Britain over the next two years.
Sejourne told reporters the alliance would evaluate the bloc's dependence on imports in the context of the importance of the molecule.
"We are 80% dependent on foreign imports for methanol, for example, and if we look at the critical production sites, we need to safeguard and retain European sovereignty... Work will be done to identify these molecules, and the plan proposes to move forward on a kind of Critical Molecules Act." Further, the Commission will include chemicals in future trade agreements and strengthen surveillance of chemical imports. The Commission has already opened 18 trade defence investigations into different molecules since 2024.
To compensate for high energy prices, the Commission will expand state aid, speed up permitting and provide energy guarantees from EU funds. The Commission will also include EU-content criteria in public procurement for chemicals, an effort being promoted across EU industries, Sejourne said. Finally, the Commission will present its sixth simplification package, known as an omnibus, for the chemicals industry. The omnibus, due to be proposed before the year end, will simplify rules on labelling of dangerous chemicals as well as revise rules around cosmetics and fertilizers adding up to savings of 363 million euros a year.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dow to close three European chemical plants, cut 800 jobs, HR News, ETHRWorld
Dow to close three European chemical plants, cut 800 jobs, HR News, ETHRWorld

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Dow to close three European chemical plants, cut 800 jobs, HR News, ETHRWorld

Advt Advt Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals. Subscribe to Newsletter to get latest insights & analysis in your inbox. All about ETHRWorld industry right on your smartphone! Download the ETHRWorld App and get the Realtime updates and Save your favourite articles. By Pooja Menon and Katha KaliaDow will shut down three upstream plants in Europe and cut around 800 jobs in response to structural challenges in the region, the chemicals company said on Monday, sending its shares down 2.5% in morning company said the shutdowns will remove higher-cost, energy-intensive portions of Dow's portfolio in chemical companies are feeling the pressure to reassess strategies, with the European Union's increasing production costs, lackluster demand and stringent environmental year, Dow had said that it had started a review of some of its European Ethylene cracker in Bohlen, Germany, Chlor-alkali & vinyl assets in Schkopau, Germany and a Basics siloxanes plant in Barry, UK will be shut in the next two years, the chemicals company said on Midland, Michigan-based company said the 800 impacted jobs are in addition to the reduction of about 1,500 Dow roles globally, announced in January as part of a $1 billion cost savings company had nearly 36,000 employees as of September 2024."While this decision is costly and will take some time to play out, we see this as positive for Dow given the run-rate EBITDA and free cash flow improvement," said TPH Energy Research analyst Matthew actions should improve the balance between supply and demand in the commodity chemical market, Blair will record charges ranging from $630 million to $790 million, for items including disposal of assets and shutdown is expected to begin in mid-2026 and is estimated to be complete by the end of 2027, with potential decommissioning and demolition to stretch into 2029 as needed, the company April, Dow had said it expects extended pressure on earnings due to uncertainty from U.S. President Donald Trump's shifting trade policies. (Reporting by Pooja Menon and Katha Kalia in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed)

Tibetan political leader slams Chinese ambassador's remarks on Dalai Lama's reincarnation
Tibetan political leader slams Chinese ambassador's remarks on Dalai Lama's reincarnation

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Tibetan political leader slams Chinese ambassador's remarks on Dalai Lama's reincarnation

The political leader of the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA), Sikyong Penpa Tsering, has dismissed the recent remarks made by Chinese Ambassador to India, Xu Feihong, on the reincarnation of the 14th Dalai Lama, saying they reflect a complete ignorance of the concept of reincarnation. Sikyong Penpa Tsering (AFP) Taking to social media recently, the Chinese diplomat shared that the Dalai Lama has no authority to decide whether the reincarnation system will continue or not. This comes after the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader announced on July 2 that the 600-year-old institution of the Dalai Lama will continue and that Gaden Phodrang Trust has sole authority to recognise the future reincarnation. Sikyong Penpa Tsering said, 'The social media post by the ambassador is ignorant of the very concept of reincarnation, because the whole purpose of reincarnation is for a spiritually realised person to decide where he or she should be reborn to carry on the responsibilities or activities of the previous life or lives.' Sikyong said that the post, in fact, reflects complete ignorance of the very notion of reincarnation and the reason and objective behind it. 'For a government that does not believe in any religion, being responsible for recognition and forcing Lamas inside to be part of that decision-making process is pitiful,' Tsering said. Taking to X, ambassador Xu Feihong shared that in fact, as a unique succession method of Tibetan Buddhism, the practice of Living Buddha reincarnation has continued over 700 years. 'Currently, there are over 1,000 reincarnation systems of Living Buddhas in Xizang and Tibetan-inhabited prefectures/counties of Sichuan, Yunnan, Gansu and Qinghai provinces. The 14th Dalai Lama is part of this long-standing historical tradition and religious succession, not otherwise. The reincarnation of Dalai Lamas neither began from him nor will end due to him. He has no authority to decide whether the reincarnation system shall continue or be abolished,' he added. In his July 2 statement, the Dalai Lama said his decision was influenced by numerous requests from Tibetan spiritual leaders, members of the Tibetan Parliament-in-exile, and the Buddhist diaspora in the Himalayas, Mongolia, the Russian Federation and Asia, including mainland China, that the institution should continue. The spiritual leader reiterated that the Gaden Phodrang Trust has sole authority to recognise the future reincarnation and no one else has any such authority to interfere in this matter. After this announcement, an irate Beijing, which describes the Dalai Lama as a 'separatist', countered that the spiritual leader's reincarnation 'must be approved by the central (Chinese) government'. The process of recognising the reincarnations of lamas in Tibetan Buddhism is solely and uniquely a Tibetan religious tradition. In contrast, China maintains that the process of selecting his successor must adhere to Chinese law, asserting its control over Tibetan Buddhism and rejecting any succession beyond its authority.

Chinese techies return not to impact iPhone 17 production, Apple's ramp-up plan intact
Chinese techies return not to impact iPhone 17 production, Apple's ramp-up plan intact

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Chinese techies return not to impact iPhone 17 production, Apple's ramp-up plan intact

By Prasoon Srivastava The return of Chinese technology professionals from an Apple vendor's facility will have no impact on the production of the upcoming iPhone 17, sources aware of the development said on Tuesday. iPhone maker Apple continues to be on track to scale up production in India, sources said. According to the sources, Apple vendors in India, Foxconn and Tata Electronics , have also seen easing of capital goods sourcing from China. These capital goods are critical for the production of iPhones. "The return of Chinese professionals from Foxconn has had no impact on iPhone production. The production of iPhone 17 in India will be as per schedule," a source aware of the development on iPhone production told PTI. A query sent to Apple, Foxconn and Tata Electronics did not elicit any response on the matter. Multiple sources have shared that hundreds of Chinese professionals working at Foxconn India units have returned to China in the last two months. According to sources, these engineers were handling assembly lines, factory design and also involved in training talents to handle tools and machines for iPhone production. Another source said that there has been an easing of the supply of capital goods from China as well for iPhones. "Apple partners have seen an easing of supply of capital goods. So there is no impact on iPhones' production in India," the source said. The person said that there is no change in Apple's plan to ramp up production in India. According to multiple sources, Apple plans to increase iPhone production to 60 million units this year from about 35-40 million units that it produced in 2024-25. Apple CEO Tim Cook, during the second-quarter earnings call had announced that all iPhones sold in the US in the June quarter will be shipped from India. India-made iPhones are assembled in Taiwanese contract manufacturer Foxconn's factory in Tamil Nadu. Tata Electronics, which runs Pegatron Corp's operations in India, is the other key manufacturer. Tata and Foxconn are building new plants and adding production capacity to increase iPhone production. Apple assembled 60 per cent more iPhones, worth an estimated USD 22 billion, in India in the year ended March 31, 2025. According to an analysis by S&P Global, iPhone sales in the US were 75.9 million units in 2024, with exports in March from India at 3.1 million units, suggesting a need to double shipments either through new capacity or redirecting shipments bound for the domestic market. "Apple's Indian exports already headed predominantly to the United States, which represented 81.9 per cent of phones exported by the firm in the three months to February 28, 2025. That increased to 97.6 per cent in March 2025 as a result of a 219 per cent jump in exports, likely reflecting the firm looking to preempt higher tariffs," S&P Global Market Intelligence report said. Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw had in April announced that iPhones worth Rs 1.5 lakh crore were exported from India in fiscal year 2025. The Apple ecosystem in India is one of the biggest job creators in the country. It is estimated to have employed around 2 lakh people across various vendors in the country. India's smartphone exports are growing at a healthy rate and have become a "consistent and significant" player in the sector, an official said, adding that the country has become a major mobile manufacturing hub today.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store