Etude
Finding the Sustainable Advantage in Chemicals
Finding the Sustainable Advantage in Chemicals
The push for greener operations and products provides new opportunities for chemical producers that invest in new capabilities.
Etude
The push for greener operations and products provides new opportunities for chemical producers that invest in new capabilities.
The global chemical sector is an essential centerpiece of modern economies, touching everything from fertilizers and fuels to petrochemicals and plastics. But the sector is increasingly under pressure for its large environmental footprint, being a heavy user of oil, gas, and other energy, and emitting more than 2 gigatons of greenhouse gases each year. Consumers, regulators, investors, and others are asking if it’s possible to reap the same benefits from the sector, only with a lighter, more sustainable impact.
Across the broad and diverse chemical sector, every company will respond to this shift in its own way, depending on market position, portfolio, capabilities, and ambitions. Some companies may take a more defensive stance, adapting their operations and business just enough to comply with new regulations and customer demands.
Others may see the shift as an opportunity for growth in new markets and existing product lines. Many of these companies are already responding with bold and innovative approaches to new products and new ways to operate.
While many companies are investing in sustainability, not all are capturing new value from these efforts. The leaders making these investments pay off define their ambitions clearly, gain a deep understanding of their customers’ needs, and form partnerships that help put their plans into action.
Each company starts from a unique point. A clear understanding of market trends and costs helps to shape their ambition and investment levels. Along the value chain, companies like Neste have faced an existential crisis to their entire portfolio and have made large bets to shift to biobased alternatives. Others, including some major plastic resin manufacturers, see a future in which green chemicals live side by side with their legacy products for years while they build out sustainable value chains.
The products in a company’s portfolio, its customers’ needs, the relative cost position of alternatives today and in the future, and the regulatory landscape are all important factors in deciding whether to invest in green solutions as an industry leader, fast follower, or somewhere in the middle. Clarity and alignment on these issues help executives decide how much to invest over time and how far from the core business those investments may be.
Once the ambition is set, the next step is for companies to get a better understanding of their customers and how they value sustainability. Specifically, what problems are their customers trying to solve, how will the new sustainable products help, and will they pay a green premium for it (or buy more of it)? Whole segments of customers may value sustainability differently: One segment may be more interested in carbon neutrality while another segment values a product that is all natural—and the perceived value determines the willingness to pay a premium greater than the actual value.
Chemical producers can tap into several different veins of opportunity here to address customers’ needs.
Customers will pay more for products that solve more of their own issues. Offering a sustainable product that makes up only a small part of a customer’s solution will be worth less than one that solves most or all of a customer’s issue. Consider the palm kernel oil example: It may make up only around 10% or so of a customer’s soap product, but if it addresses the customer’s concerns about deforestation, then it may be worth a lot.
Most new solutions require collaborations across the supply chain to help improve traceability, use alternative feedstocks, and develop new ways of processing materials. Partnerships also help share the significant financial risks that come with the development of new processes and products. Having a strong partnership strategy can drastically increase the speed of adoption, likelihood of success, and economic risk sharing with new investments.
A good example is the Houston Recycling Collaboration, a joint effort of industry (Cyclyx, ExxonMobil, FCC Environmental Services, and LyondellBasell) and the city to increase Houston’s plastics recycling while ensuring a steady pipeline of end-of-life materials that can be used in producing recycled plastic. Exxon and LyondellBasell have pledged $100 million for a sorting and processing facility, and Cyclyx will provide the sorting and processing technology. Once operational, the facility could produce 150,000 metric tons of plastic feedstock annually in different blends to create recycled plastics. This partnership approach increases the availability of high-quality feedstock, shares risk between partners while leveraging the unique capabilities of each, and solves a wide range of other sustainability and business issues for all three partners.
In Chicago, Dow and WM (formerly Waste Management) are piloting a curbside recycling program for plastic films (including bags and wrapping) that are not included in standard plastic recycling. The companies hope to scale up the program to capture 120,000 metric tons of plastic film by 2025, providing Dow with a stable supply of recycled feedstock to use in its products.
Other new capabilities also may be required. Commodity chemical and plastic producers may excel at operations, but they might not be as good at developing keen insights about the customer’s business, which is essential for understanding how customers may value the sustainable chemicals that often come with a premium.
Of course, significant change at this level can’t succeed without a sustained effort and orchestrated push by senior management. Companies that are doing well in their transition get four things right:
Leading chemical producers already see tremendous opportunities in riding the green wave. Developing a deep understanding of the customer’s business—in particular, their sustainability needs and goals—is the key step that informs the initiative. Other steps are important, too: Learning how to sell a premium green product, making the necessary partnerships, and pricing according to value are also essential for building new, more sustainable chemical businesses that may ultimately compete with and supplant their legacy operations.