Chemicals and Market Impact

If We Make Chemicals Out Of Crops, What Happens To The Prices Below?

Apr 19, 2022 1:45:16 PM / by Cooley May

In our ESG and Climate report tomorrow, we are focusing on renewable materials and fuels, emphasizing counting carbon and the importance of verification and auditing. However, one of the side issues concerning renewables is their impact on food prices if they bid crops away from the food chain. The chart of the day from our daily chemical reactions report shows that corn prices are above their historical correlation with crude oil, but it also indicates a correlation and fuel markets can pay more for corn and other crop-based fuels when oil prices are high. The issue with exhibit below is that we already have inflated crop prices with minimal incremental demand for the fuel markets today. Prices are rising on strong global demand growth for food – supply chain issues that existed before the Ukraine crisis and – the supply challenges that are a direct consequence of the Ukraine crisis. This is before any significant investment in renewable fuels or materials. As governments implement policies to encourage renewable fuels – especially SAF – they need to consider what policies and incentives might be required in addition to price, encourage meaningful changes to the acres planted around the world, and help productivity where it is low.

Exhibit 4-Apr-19-2022-05-46-05-56-PM

Source: Bloomberg, C-MACC Analysis, April 2022

Tags: Chemicals, Commodities, Polyethylene, Supply Chain, renewables, naphtha, materials, crude oil, gasoline, renewable fuels, Corn, crops, food chain

Cooley May

Written by Cooley May

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