SABIC will increase capacity for two of its high-performance engineering thermoplastic materials, ULTEM and NORYL resins, expanding plants in Singapore and the Netherlands.
ULTEM resins, a polyetherimide material, will have increased production after SABIC announced plans to expand a plant in Singapore where it currently has compounding operations.
Sabic Singapore, on Pioneer Road
The planned new production facility in Singapore is expected to go online in the first half of 2021. The company also plans to recommission operations at its Bergen op Zoom PPE resin plant in the Netherlands by the end of 2019 to produce polyphenylene ether (PPE), the base resin for its line of NORYL resins and oligomers.
Ernesto Occhiello, Executive Vice President for Specialties at SABIC, said: “Increased customer demand, especially in Asia, prompted the further capacity expansion plans. While interim capacity gains for both ULTEM and NORYL resins have been achieved, global demand for both product lines has increased significantly, and SABIC is planning to expand its capacity to support our customers’ growth aspirations. We will continue to focus efforts to deliver the right capacity, in the right global locations, at the right time to support our customers’ needs.”
ULTEM resins are currently produced in two locations, Mt. Vernon, Indiana, and Cartagena, Spain. The planned operations in Singapore will localise supply for customers in Asia, reducing lead times, especially for shorter qualification cycle applications. When fully operational, the Singapore facility is expected to increase capacity by 50 per cent over a 2018 baseline. “With the addition of Singapore, SABIC will be the only petrochemical company with the ability to produce the high heat resin in Asia, the Americas and Europe, a significant advantage for the company’s customers,” Occhiello noted.
The decision to recommission the Bergen op Zoom NORYL resins facility provides customers with a second source of PPE resins globally, and affirms SABIC’s commitment to the European market and global customers who specify their material solution needs from Europe. When operational, the Bergen op Zoom facility is expected to add more than 40 per cent global capacity over a 2017 baseline.