During November, global capacity rose 0.1% and was up 2.2% Y/Y.
Global chemicals production rose 1.9% in November, up from 1.7% in October and extending the recovery that began in June, shows the data collected and tabulated by the American Chemistry Council (ACC).
During November, chemical production grew in all regions except the Former Soviet Union (FSU). Headline global production was up 3.7% year-over-year (Y/Y) on a three-month moving average (3MMA) basis and is now 2.9% above the pre-COVID peak last December. Global output stood at 122.0 percent of its average 2012 levels.
During November, global capacity rose 0.1% and was up 2.2% Y/Y. With improving production, capacity utilization in the global chemical industry rose 1.5 points to 82.9%. This is up from 81.7% in October and the pre-COVID peak in December 2019, but below the long-term (1987-2017) average of 86.5%.
By regions, output rose in North America (up 0.7%), Europe (up 1.7%), Asia-Pacific (up 2.5%), Latin America (up 0.4%) and Africa & the Middle East (up 0.6%). FSU saw flat production in the reported month.
Among chemical industry segments, November results were positive, with gains across all segments. Considering year-earlier comparisons, growth was mixed, with gains in plastic resins, synthetic rubber, manufactured fibers, bulk petrochemicals and organics, inorganic chemicals, other specialties, agricultural chemicals, and consumer products, but contraction in coatings.
With respect to segments, production expanded 1.9% in basic chemicals, 2.8% in specialty chemicals, 1.3% in agricultural chemicals and 0.7% in consumer products in November.
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