China’s massive capacity expansion has fundamentally altered global trade flows. The country has transitioned from a major importer to a net exporter of chemicals, contributing to global oversupply.
Nevertheless, further expansion is being moderated. Policy initiatives — including measures associated with the so-called «Anti-Involution» framework — may lead to the retirement of older, less efficient production units.
Looking ahead, the strongest structural demand growth will emerge from Africa and India. By 2030, these two regions together will account for nearly 40% of the world’s population, with Africa representing around 20% and India approximately 18%. Their economic expansion will drive long-term chemical consumption growth.
In response to global competitive pressures, Europe and parts of Asia are implementing large-scale rationalization programs. Millions of tons of capacity are being removed to restore competitiveness, while import dependency is gradually increasing.
Regional Perspectives
China & East Asia
China remains the global leader in self-sufficiency but, due to excess capacity, has become a net exporter influencing global trade flows and pricing structures. Korea and Japan are restructuring their chemical sectors following the loss of market share in China. India is expanding its chemical production base to support national economic growth.
Middle East & Africa
GCC countries continue to pursue resource-based industrial strategies, leveraging state-backed initiatives to reinforce petrochemical leadership and global market share. Africa’s economic growth will stimulate domestic demand and attract increased import flows from other regions.
North America
The narrowing feedstock advantage is increasing cost pressure. At the same time, technological innovation and process optimization remain key competitive strengths.
Europe
Capacity closures are accelerating. The region is pivoting toward higher-value specialties and green chemicals while increasing reliance on imports for commodity products.
Turkmenistan
Turkmenistan is emerging as a strategic resource player. Through a forward-looking «In Turkmenistan for Turkmenistan» investment model, the country is prioritizing domestic value creation and downstream development.
Conclusion
Producers worldwide are investing in long-term growth while accepting short-term oversupply in order to secure and expand market share. China will remain the primary demand hub. North America will focus on innovation and efficiency. Europe and parts of Asia will continue to right-size their chemical industries. Resource-rich countries such as Turkmenistan are expected to strengthen their positions in alignment with national industrial strategies.