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STYRENIX
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Recent events
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Corporate Actions
Styrenix Performance Materials To Acquire 36.13% Equity Shares Of Clean Max Jasper
Feb 5 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
TO ACQUIRE 36.13% EQUITY SHARES OF CLEAN MAX JASPER
TO INVEST UPTO 76.7 MLN RUPEES IN CMJPL
Source text: ID:nNSEXS91j
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];;))
Feb 5 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
TO ACQUIRE 36.13% EQUITY SHARES OF CLEAN MAX JASPER
TO INVEST UPTO 76.7 MLN RUPEES IN CMJPL
Source text: ID:nNSEXS91j
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];;))
Styrenix Performance Materials Says Unit Completes Acquisition Of Ineos Thailand
Jan 17 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
UNIT COMPLETES ACQUISITION OF 100% SHAREHOLDING OF INEOS THAILAND
Source text: ID:nBSE131cYC
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];;))
Jan 17 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
UNIT COMPLETES ACQUISITION OF 100% SHAREHOLDING OF INEOS THAILAND
Source text: ID:nBSE131cYC
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];;))
Styrenix Performance Materials To Buy Ineos Styrolution (Thailand) Co
Dec 9 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - TO BUY INEOS STYROLUTION (THAILAND) CO
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - DEAL FOR INEOS THAILAND FOR USD 20 MILLION
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - APPROVED INCORPORATION OF A STEP-DOWN SUBSIDIARY IN THAILAND
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS - DECLARES DIVIDEND OF 31 RUPEES PER SHARE
Source text: ID:nBSE3Q5jxQ
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];))
Dec 9 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - TO BUY INEOS STYROLUTION (THAILAND) CO
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - DEAL FOR INEOS THAILAND FOR USD 20 MILLION
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - APPROVED INCORPORATION OF A STEP-DOWN SUBSIDIARY IN THAILAND
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS - DECLARES DIVIDEND OF 31 RUPEES PER SHARE
Source text: ID:nBSE3Q5jxQ
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];))
India's Styrenix hits record high on surge in Q1 profit
** Shares of Styrenix Performance Materials STYE.NS rise as much as 15.4% to record high of 2731.20 rupees
** The plastic resin producer posts ~89% jump in Q1 profit, while rev from ops rose ~29%
** STYE on track for fourth straight session of gains
** Stock last up 12%, extending YTD gains to ~84%
(Reporting by Dimpal Gulwani in Bengaluru)
** Shares of Styrenix Performance Materials STYE.NS rise as much as 15.4% to record high of 2731.20 rupees
** The plastic resin producer posts ~89% jump in Q1 profit, while rev from ops rose ~29%
** STYE on track for fourth straight session of gains
** Stock last up 12%, extending YTD gains to ~84%
(Reporting by Dimpal Gulwani in Bengaluru)
Canada asks chemical plants to check pollution after leaks hit Indigenous community
By Saadeq Ahmed
TORONTO, May 17 (Reuters) - Canada on Friday ordered some petrochemical plants in Ontario to take strict measures to control pollution from cancer-causing chemical benzene after release from a facility forced a First Nation community to declare a state of emergency.
Federal Environment and Climate Change Minister Steven Guilbeault issued the order to the petrochemical industry in Sarnia, Ontario, a city less than 300 km (186 miles) west of Toronto.
Last month, Aamjiwnaang First Nation declared a state of emergency due to a chemical release from German company INEOS Styrolution's STYE.NS plastic manufacturing plant, which resulted in at least 10 people visiting the hospital.
The order will require some petrochemical production facilities to implement vapor-control measures, specifically, those that have fenceline concentrations of benzene above 29 micrograms per cubic metre in any of the two-week sampling periods ranging from March 1, 2023, to Feb. 29, 2024.
"It is simply unacceptable that the people of Aamjiwnaang First Nation and Sarnia face ongoing issues with poor air quality," Guilbeault said in a statement.
"Indigenous peoples have a right to a healthy environment and too often are impacted by polluting industries."
Aamjiwnaang First Nation, which has 1,000 residents, is surrounded by industrial facilities. The Frankfurt-based company, a unit of privately owned INEOS Group INEOSE.UL had shut down its facility on April 20.
The First Nation community said that the order will add to the protection of the air quality in Aamjiwnaang.
According to University of Toronto research, around 40% of Canada's petrochemical plants are located in the Sarnia area, known as "Chemical Valley."
(Reporting by Saadeq Ahmend;
Editing by Sandra Maler)
(([email protected]; +1 416 301 0464;))
By Saadeq Ahmed
TORONTO, May 17 (Reuters) - Canada on Friday ordered some petrochemical plants in Ontario to take strict measures to control pollution from cancer-causing chemical benzene after release from a facility forced a First Nation community to declare a state of emergency.
Federal Environment and Climate Change Minister Steven Guilbeault issued the order to the petrochemical industry in Sarnia, Ontario, a city less than 300 km (186 miles) west of Toronto.
Last month, Aamjiwnaang First Nation declared a state of emergency due to a chemical release from German company INEOS Styrolution's STYE.NS plastic manufacturing plant, which resulted in at least 10 people visiting the hospital.
The order will require some petrochemical production facilities to implement vapor-control measures, specifically, those that have fenceline concentrations of benzene above 29 micrograms per cubic metre in any of the two-week sampling periods ranging from March 1, 2023, to Feb. 29, 2024.
"It is simply unacceptable that the people of Aamjiwnaang First Nation and Sarnia face ongoing issues with poor air quality," Guilbeault said in a statement.
"Indigenous peoples have a right to a healthy environment and too often are impacted by polluting industries."
Aamjiwnaang First Nation, which has 1,000 residents, is surrounded by industrial facilities. The Frankfurt-based company, a unit of privately owned INEOS Group INEOSE.UL had shut down its facility on April 20.
The First Nation community said that the order will add to the protection of the air quality in Aamjiwnaang.
According to University of Toronto research, around 40% of Canada's petrochemical plants are located in the Sarnia area, known as "Chemical Valley."
(Reporting by Saadeq Ahmend;
Editing by Sandra Maler)
(([email protected]; +1 416 301 0464;))
Styrenix Performance Materials Gets Assessment Order Demanding 87.3 Mln Rupees As Tax Liability
Nov 16 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
GETS ASSESSMENT ORDER DEMANDING 87.3 MILLION RUPEES AS TAX LIABILITY
Source text for Eikon: ID:nBSE4HjVTv
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];))
Nov 16 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
GETS ASSESSMENT ORDER DEMANDING 87.3 MILLION RUPEES AS TAX LIABILITY
Source text for Eikon: ID:nBSE4HjVTv
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];))
India's Styrenix Performance at over 1.5-yr high on 2-fold jump in profit
** Shares of Styrenix Performance Materials STYE.NS rise as much as 9.61% to 1,398.95 rupees, their highest level since Jan. 17, 2022
** Plastic resin producer posts 139% jump in profit, revenue rose by 8%
** Stock on course for a second straight winning day, if gains hold
** More than 584,000 shares traded by 3.00 p.m. IST, 13.5x its 30-day avg
** Stock up ~75% YTD
(Reporting by Aleef Jahan in Bengaluru)
** Shares of Styrenix Performance Materials STYE.NS rise as much as 9.61% to 1,398.95 rupees, their highest level since Jan. 17, 2022
** Plastic resin producer posts 139% jump in profit, revenue rose by 8%
** Stock on course for a second straight winning day, if gains hold
** More than 584,000 shares traded by 3.00 p.m. IST, 13.5x its 30-day avg
** Stock up ~75% YTD
(Reporting by Aleef Jahan in Bengaluru)
FACTBOX-Carbon storage projects across Europe
Adds Dutch court decision on Porthos project, Wintershall Dea Camelot project
Aug 16 (Reuters) - Efforts to remove carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from industries and store them underground have gathered pace across Europe over the past few years as countries scramble to meet climate goals.
The interest in carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology has also been driven by rising EU carbon permit costs and the need to decarbonize industries such as cement production, which have few or no alternatives.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) considers CCS to be a vital technology to achieve global climate goals, but it needs to be scaled up quickly to have an impact.
Here are some CO2 storage projects planned or under development in Europe:
NORWAY
* Northern Lights, a joint venture project by Equinor EQNR.OL, TotalEnergies TTEF.PA and Shell SHELL.L, plans to start injecting up to 1.5 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) of CO2 into saline aquifer near the Troll gas field in 2024. There are plans to increase storage capacity to over 5 mtpa from 2026, pending demand. The project, which calls itself "the world's first open-source CO2 transport and storage infrastructure", plans to import CO2 from the Netherlands and Denmark in addition to local sources.
* Smeaheia, a project by Equinor to develop a storage site in the North Sea, with a potential to inject up to 20 mtpa from 2027-2028. Equinor said it was looking at injecting the CO2 captured from its own hydrogen production, as well as some industrial customers in Europe. The company aims to make the final investment decision in 2025.
* Luna, a project led by German Wintershall Dea [RIC:RIC:WINT.UL], to store up to 5 mtpa of CO2 at a site some 120km west of Bergen. Wintershall Dea and its Norwegian partner, Cape Omega, were awarded an exploration licence in October. Wintershall Dea has 60% stake and Norway's Cape Omega the remaining 40% in the licence.
* Havstjerne is a second project led by Wintershall Dea in the North Sea, in partnership with offshore service provider Altera Infrastructure Group Ltd, to explore a CO2 storage with potential capacity to inject 7 mtpa. The project envisions injecting CO2 transported by shuttle tankers from multiple collection hubs across Europe.
* Trudvang, a joint project by Sval Energi, Storegga and Neptune Energi to develop a storage site east of the Sleipner gas field in the North Sea with a capacity to inject about 9 mtpa of CO2 from 2029. Sval is the proposed operator with 40% ownership, while Storegga and Neptune each have 30%.
* Poseidon, an Aker BP-led AKER.BP project to explore for a CO2 storage in the North Sea with potential capacity to inject more than 5 mtpa. Aker BP, Norway's second-largest listed oil and gas firm, has a 60% stake and Austria's OMV has a 40% stake. The site could potentially store emissions from OMV's majority-owned Austrian plastics group Borealis BESGR.UL.
BRITAIN
The British government has pledged to invest 20 billion pounds ($25.50 billion) over the next 20 years in projects to capture, utilize and store carbon dioxide, as part of its plan to meet climate goals. By 2030, it aims to capture and store 20-30 mtpa of CO2.
* HyNet North West project aims to convert gas and fuel gas from the Stanlow refinery in Cheshire into low-carbon hydrogen, capturing and transferring the CO2 produced during the process by pipelines to offshore storage in the Liverpool Bay. Italian energy group Eni ENI.MI will operate a CO2 pipeline and an offshore storage at a depleted gas field. Operations are expected to start in 2025, initially injecting about 4.5 mtpa of CO2 into the storage, and increasing the volume to 10 mtpa by 2030.
* Northern Endurance, a BP-led BP.L partnership, aims to develop infrastructure to transport and store CO2 captured at industrial site in Humber and Teesside under the seabed in the southern North Sea. The project could potentially transport and store up to 27 mtpa by 2030, with the first injections expected to start in 2027. The project includes BP, Equinor and TotalEnergies. Two previous partners, Notional Grid and Shell SHEL.L left the project in April 2023 to focus on other activities.
* Acorn CCS, the project operated by Storegga, aims to develop a CO2 storage site off the coast of Scotland, with a capacity to inject 5-10 mtpa of CO2 by 2030. Storegga, Harbour Energy HBR.L and Shell have 30% each in the project, while North Sea Midstream Partners (NSMP) hold the remaining 10%.
* Viking CCS, a project led by Harbour Energy, aims to store up to 10 mtpa of CO2 by 2030 at the depleted Viking gas fields in the southern North Sea. It plans to start injecting CO2 in 2027, initially at a rate of 2 mtpa of CO2, ramping up to 10 mtpa by 2030 and 15 mtpa by 2035. Harbour holds 60% stake while BP BP.L has 40%.
* Camelot, a project by Synergia Energy and Wintershall Dea to explore a potential to store up to 6 mtpa the Southern North Sea from 2030, if confirmed by drilling. The license covers a group of depleted gas fields and an overlying saline aquifer. Synergia Energy will operate the project in the appraisal phase.
THE NETHERLANDS
* Porthos, a project by the port of Rotterdam, Gasunie and EBN, aims to store 2.5 mtpa of CO2 in depleted Dutch gas fields in the North Sea. All storage capacity has been already contracted by 4 industrial partners: Air Liquide AIRP.PA, Air Products APD.N, ExxonMobil XOM.N and Shell.
The project planned to start CO2 injections in 2024-2025, but a legal dispute has delayed startup until 2026. The Netherlands' highest court ruled on Aug. 16 that the project can go ahead.
* L10, a project led by Neptune Energy, to store 4-5 mtpa of CO2 in depleted gas fields in the Dutch North Sea.
Other project partners are ExxonMobil, Rosewood Exploration and state-owned EBN. They partners plan to apply for a storage licence in March, with the first CO2 injections seen in 2027-2028, later than previously planned 2026.
DENMARK
* Greensand, a pilot project led by INEOS Energy INEO.NS and Wintershall Dea, each with 40% stake, to demonstrate that CO2 can be stored in the Nini West field, a depleted oil reservoir in the Danish North Sea. The Danish state will have the remaining 20% via Nordsofonden.
The project aims to start injecting initially up to 1.5 mtpa of CO2 from the end of 2025, increasing capacity to 8 mtpa by 2030. Wintershall Dea hopes that it could also attract interest from potential customers in Germany.
* Bifrost, a project led by TotalEnergies, aims to inject up to 3 mtpa of CO2 into depleted Harald gas fields in the Danish North Sea from 2027, and increase capacity to more than 10 mtpa by 2030. The project also involves Orsted ORSTED.CO, which operates offshore pipelines, and the Technical University of Denmark. In February, Denmark awarded TotalEnergies two CO2 storage licences including the Harald area.
GERMANY
Several German companies are looking at the possibility of exporting CO2 captured at industrial plants to offshore storage sites developed by others in the North Sea, but the government still needs to change the laws to remove legal obstacles for doing so.
* Wilhelmshaven CO2 export terminal, a project led by Wintershall Dea WINT.UL to build a CO2 liquefaction and temporary storage facility at Wilhelmshaven, Germany's only deep-water port, and then to ship or pipe CO2 to permanent storage sites in the North Sea. It aims to initially handle about 1 mtpa of CO2 from 2026.
Equinor and Wintershall DEA also eye the construction of a 900-km (560-mile) long pipeline to transport CO2 from northern Germany to storage sites offshore Norway before 2032.
BULGARIA
* ANRAV, a project led by private Irish energy company Petroceltic, will link CO2 capture facilities at HeidelbergCement's HEIG.DE Devnya cement plant in north-eastern Bulgaria with offshore permanent storage in the depleted Black Sea gas field of Galata.
Expected to start operations in 2028, it will have a capacity of 800,000 tonnes of CO2 a year.
FRANCE
* PYCASSO, a project capturing carbon from industries in the southwest of France and north of Spain to be stored in a depleted gas field in Aquitaine. It is planned to transport about 1 mtpa of CO2 by 2030.
ICELAND
* The Coda Terminal will be a cross-border carbon transport and storage hub in Straumsvík, operated by Icelandic carbon storage firm Carbfix.
CO2 captured from industrial firms will be shipped to the terminal to be dissolved in water before being injected into basalt bedrock. The operations, scaled up in steps, are set to reach up to 3 mtpa of CO2 from 2031.
* The Silverstone project, coordinated by Carbfix, will deploy commercial-scale CO2 capture, dissolve CO2 in water and inject it into underground basalt rock for mineral storage in the Hellisheidi geothermal power plant, near Mount Hengill.
Silverstone will capture and store about 25,000 tonnes of CO2 a year. It is expected to start up in the first quarter of 2025.
ITALY
* CCS Ravenna Hub, led by energy company ENI ENI.MI, is a project to capture CO2 and transport it to offshore depleted gas reservoirs off the coast of Ravenna in the Adriatic Sea.
The first phase is scheduled in 2023. The full capture, transport and storage chain will handle up to 100,000 mtpa of CO2.
IRELAND
* The Cork CCS project aims to store carbon captured from Irish industrial facilities in a depleted gas field in the Celtic Sea, potentially re-using an existing pipeline for transport. The project is lead by utility Ervia.
SWEDEN
* Slite CCS, a CCS project led by HeidelbergCement and its Swedish subsidiary Cementa, at its Slite cement plant on the Swedish island of Gotland, in the Baltic Sea.
It aims to capture up to 1.8 mtpa of CO2, about 3% of the country's total emissions, and store those at several sites under development in the North Sea.
($1 = 0.7843 pounds)
(Compiled by Dina Kartid and Nerijus Adomaitis; Editing by Nina Chestney and Clarence Fernandez)
(([email protected];))
Adds Dutch court decision on Porthos project, Wintershall Dea Camelot project
Aug 16 (Reuters) - Efforts to remove carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from industries and store them underground have gathered pace across Europe over the past few years as countries scramble to meet climate goals.
The interest in carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology has also been driven by rising EU carbon permit costs and the need to decarbonize industries such as cement production, which have few or no alternatives.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) considers CCS to be a vital technology to achieve global climate goals, but it needs to be scaled up quickly to have an impact.
Here are some CO2 storage projects planned or under development in Europe:
NORWAY
* Northern Lights, a joint venture project by Equinor EQNR.OL, TotalEnergies TTEF.PA and Shell SHELL.L, plans to start injecting up to 1.5 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) of CO2 into saline aquifer near the Troll gas field in 2024. There are plans to increase storage capacity to over 5 mtpa from 2026, pending demand. The project, which calls itself "the world's first open-source CO2 transport and storage infrastructure", plans to import CO2 from the Netherlands and Denmark in addition to local sources.
* Smeaheia, a project by Equinor to develop a storage site in the North Sea, with a potential to inject up to 20 mtpa from 2027-2028. Equinor said it was looking at injecting the CO2 captured from its own hydrogen production, as well as some industrial customers in Europe. The company aims to make the final investment decision in 2025.
* Luna, a project led by German Wintershall Dea [RIC:RIC:WINT.UL], to store up to 5 mtpa of CO2 at a site some 120km west of Bergen. Wintershall Dea and its Norwegian partner, Cape Omega, were awarded an exploration licence in October. Wintershall Dea has 60% stake and Norway's Cape Omega the remaining 40% in the licence.
* Havstjerne is a second project led by Wintershall Dea in the North Sea, in partnership with offshore service provider Altera Infrastructure Group Ltd, to explore a CO2 storage with potential capacity to inject 7 mtpa. The project envisions injecting CO2 transported by shuttle tankers from multiple collection hubs across Europe.
* Trudvang, a joint project by Sval Energi, Storegga and Neptune Energi to develop a storage site east of the Sleipner gas field in the North Sea with a capacity to inject about 9 mtpa of CO2 from 2029. Sval is the proposed operator with 40% ownership, while Storegga and Neptune each have 30%.
* Poseidon, an Aker BP-led AKER.BP project to explore for a CO2 storage in the North Sea with potential capacity to inject more than 5 mtpa. Aker BP, Norway's second-largest listed oil and gas firm, has a 60% stake and Austria's OMV has a 40% stake. The site could potentially store emissions from OMV's majority-owned Austrian plastics group Borealis BESGR.UL.
BRITAIN
The British government has pledged to invest 20 billion pounds ($25.50 billion) over the next 20 years in projects to capture, utilize and store carbon dioxide, as part of its plan to meet climate goals. By 2030, it aims to capture and store 20-30 mtpa of CO2.
* HyNet North West project aims to convert gas and fuel gas from the Stanlow refinery in Cheshire into low-carbon hydrogen, capturing and transferring the CO2 produced during the process by pipelines to offshore storage in the Liverpool Bay. Italian energy group Eni ENI.MI will operate a CO2 pipeline and an offshore storage at a depleted gas field. Operations are expected to start in 2025, initially injecting about 4.5 mtpa of CO2 into the storage, and increasing the volume to 10 mtpa by 2030.
* Northern Endurance, a BP-led BP.L partnership, aims to develop infrastructure to transport and store CO2 captured at industrial site in Humber and Teesside under the seabed in the southern North Sea. The project could potentially transport and store up to 27 mtpa by 2030, with the first injections expected to start in 2027. The project includes BP, Equinor and TotalEnergies. Two previous partners, Notional Grid and Shell SHEL.L left the project in April 2023 to focus on other activities.
* Acorn CCS, the project operated by Storegga, aims to develop a CO2 storage site off the coast of Scotland, with a capacity to inject 5-10 mtpa of CO2 by 2030. Storegga, Harbour Energy HBR.L and Shell have 30% each in the project, while North Sea Midstream Partners (NSMP) hold the remaining 10%.
* Viking CCS, a project led by Harbour Energy, aims to store up to 10 mtpa of CO2 by 2030 at the depleted Viking gas fields in the southern North Sea. It plans to start injecting CO2 in 2027, initially at a rate of 2 mtpa of CO2, ramping up to 10 mtpa by 2030 and 15 mtpa by 2035. Harbour holds 60% stake while BP BP.L has 40%.
* Camelot, a project by Synergia Energy and Wintershall Dea to explore a potential to store up to 6 mtpa the Southern North Sea from 2030, if confirmed by drilling. The license covers a group of depleted gas fields and an overlying saline aquifer. Synergia Energy will operate the project in the appraisal phase.
THE NETHERLANDS
* Porthos, a project by the port of Rotterdam, Gasunie and EBN, aims to store 2.5 mtpa of CO2 in depleted Dutch gas fields in the North Sea. All storage capacity has been already contracted by 4 industrial partners: Air Liquide AIRP.PA, Air Products APD.N, ExxonMobil XOM.N and Shell.
The project planned to start CO2 injections in 2024-2025, but a legal dispute has delayed startup until 2026. The Netherlands' highest court ruled on Aug. 16 that the project can go ahead.
* L10, a project led by Neptune Energy, to store 4-5 mtpa of CO2 in depleted gas fields in the Dutch North Sea.
Other project partners are ExxonMobil, Rosewood Exploration and state-owned EBN. They partners plan to apply for a storage licence in March, with the first CO2 injections seen in 2027-2028, later than previously planned 2026.
DENMARK
* Greensand, a pilot project led by INEOS Energy INEO.NS and Wintershall Dea, each with 40% stake, to demonstrate that CO2 can be stored in the Nini West field, a depleted oil reservoir in the Danish North Sea. The Danish state will have the remaining 20% via Nordsofonden.
The project aims to start injecting initially up to 1.5 mtpa of CO2 from the end of 2025, increasing capacity to 8 mtpa by 2030. Wintershall Dea hopes that it could also attract interest from potential customers in Germany.
* Bifrost, a project led by TotalEnergies, aims to inject up to 3 mtpa of CO2 into depleted Harald gas fields in the Danish North Sea from 2027, and increase capacity to more than 10 mtpa by 2030. The project also involves Orsted ORSTED.CO, which operates offshore pipelines, and the Technical University of Denmark. In February, Denmark awarded TotalEnergies two CO2 storage licences including the Harald area.
GERMANY
Several German companies are looking at the possibility of exporting CO2 captured at industrial plants to offshore storage sites developed by others in the North Sea, but the government still needs to change the laws to remove legal obstacles for doing so.
* Wilhelmshaven CO2 export terminal, a project led by Wintershall Dea WINT.UL to build a CO2 liquefaction and temporary storage facility at Wilhelmshaven, Germany's only deep-water port, and then to ship or pipe CO2 to permanent storage sites in the North Sea. It aims to initially handle about 1 mtpa of CO2 from 2026.
Equinor and Wintershall DEA also eye the construction of a 900-km (560-mile) long pipeline to transport CO2 from northern Germany to storage sites offshore Norway before 2032.
BULGARIA
* ANRAV, a project led by private Irish energy company Petroceltic, will link CO2 capture facilities at HeidelbergCement's HEIG.DE Devnya cement plant in north-eastern Bulgaria with offshore permanent storage in the depleted Black Sea gas field of Galata.
Expected to start operations in 2028, it will have a capacity of 800,000 tonnes of CO2 a year.
FRANCE
* PYCASSO, a project capturing carbon from industries in the southwest of France and north of Spain to be stored in a depleted gas field in Aquitaine. It is planned to transport about 1 mtpa of CO2 by 2030.
ICELAND
* The Coda Terminal will be a cross-border carbon transport and storage hub in Straumsvík, operated by Icelandic carbon storage firm Carbfix.
CO2 captured from industrial firms will be shipped to the terminal to be dissolved in water before being injected into basalt bedrock. The operations, scaled up in steps, are set to reach up to 3 mtpa of CO2 from 2031.
* The Silverstone project, coordinated by Carbfix, will deploy commercial-scale CO2 capture, dissolve CO2 in water and inject it into underground basalt rock for mineral storage in the Hellisheidi geothermal power plant, near Mount Hengill.
Silverstone will capture and store about 25,000 tonnes of CO2 a year. It is expected to start up in the first quarter of 2025.
ITALY
* CCS Ravenna Hub, led by energy company ENI ENI.MI, is a project to capture CO2 and transport it to offshore depleted gas reservoirs off the coast of Ravenna in the Adriatic Sea.
The first phase is scheduled in 2023. The full capture, transport and storage chain will handle up to 100,000 mtpa of CO2.
IRELAND
* The Cork CCS project aims to store carbon captured from Irish industrial facilities in a depleted gas field in the Celtic Sea, potentially re-using an existing pipeline for transport. The project is lead by utility Ervia.
SWEDEN
* Slite CCS, a CCS project led by HeidelbergCement and its Swedish subsidiary Cementa, at its Slite cement plant on the Swedish island of Gotland, in the Baltic Sea.
It aims to capture up to 1.8 mtpa of CO2, about 3% of the country's total emissions, and store those at several sites under development in the North Sea.
($1 = 0.7843 pounds)
(Compiled by Dina Kartid and Nerijus Adomaitis; Editing by Nina Chestney and Clarence Fernandez)
(([email protected];))
India's Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd June-Quarter Profit Falls
Aug 10 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
INDIA'S STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD JUNE-QUARTER PROFIT 324.4 MILLION RUPEES VERSUS PROFIT 867.9 MILLION RUPEES
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD JUNE-QUARTER REVENUE FROM OPERATIONS 5.44 BILLION RUPEES VERSUS 6.5 BILLION RUPEES
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - CFO SANJEEV MADAN RESIGNED
Source text for Eikon: ID:nBSE7dN5N7
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];))
Aug 10 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
INDIA'S STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD JUNE-QUARTER PROFIT 324.4 MILLION RUPEES VERSUS PROFIT 867.9 MILLION RUPEES
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD JUNE-QUARTER REVENUE FROM OPERATIONS 5.44 BILLION RUPEES VERSUS 6.5 BILLION RUPEES
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - CFO SANJEEV MADAN RESIGNED
Source text for Eikon: ID:nBSE7dN5N7
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];))
Styrenix Performance Materials Final Dividend 24 Rupees Per Share
May 26 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - FINAL DIVIDEND 24 RUPEES PER SHARE
INDIA'S STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS MARCH-QUARTER PROFIT 424.4 MILLION RUPEES VERSUS 990.6 MILLION RUPEES
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS MARCH-QUARTER REVENUE FROM OPERATIONS 6.15 BILLION RUPEES VERSUS 6.24 BILLION RUPEES
Source text for Eikon: [ID:]
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
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May 26 (Reuters) - Styrenix Performance Materials Ltd STYE.NS:
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS LTD - FINAL DIVIDEND 24 RUPEES PER SHARE
INDIA'S STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS MARCH-QUARTER PROFIT 424.4 MILLION RUPEES VERSUS 990.6 MILLION RUPEES
STYRENIX PERFORMANCE MATERIALS MARCH-QUARTER REVENUE FROM OPERATIONS 6.15 BILLION RUPEES VERSUS 6.24 BILLION RUPEES
Source text for Eikon: [ID:]
Further company coverage: STYE.NS
(([email protected];;))
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What does Styrenix Performance do?
Styrolution India Private Limited has merged to become INEOS Styrolution India Limited. The company manufactures, trades, and sells Engineering Thermoplastics. It has manufacturing facilities in Gujarat and a Research and Development center.
Who are the competitors of Styrenix Performance?
Styrenix Performance major competitors are Bhansali Engg. Poly., Shaily Engg. Plastic, Camlin Fine Sciences, Tanfac Industries, Vishnu Chemicals, Galaxy Surfactants, Elantas Beck India. Market Cap of Styrenix Performance is ₹5,064 Crs. While the median market cap of its peers are ₹3,216 Crs.
Is Styrenix Performance financially stable compared to its competitors?
Styrenix Performance seems to be less financially stable compared to its competitors. Altman Z score of Styrenix Performance is 13.94 and is ranked 5 out of its 8 competitors.
Does Styrenix Performance pay decent dividends?
The company seems to pay a good stable dividend. Styrenix Performance latest dividend payout ratio is 99.54% and 3yr average dividend payout ratio is 120.48%
How has Styrenix Performance allocated its funds?
Companies resources are majorly tied in miscellaneous assets
How strong is Styrenix Performance balance sheet?
Balance sheet of Styrenix Performance is strong. But short term working capital might become an issue for this company.
Is the profitablity of Styrenix Performance improving?
The profit is oscillating. The profit of Styrenix Performance is ₹209 Crs for TTM, ₹173 Crs for Mar 2024 and ₹183 Crs for Mar 2023.
Is the debt of Styrenix Performance increasing or decreasing?
Yes, The debt of Styrenix Performance is increasing. Latest debt of Styrenix Performance is -₹34.41 Crs as of Sep-24. This is greater than Mar-24 when it was -₹103.31 Crs.
Is Styrenix Performance stock expensive?
Yes, Styrenix Performance is expensive. Latest PE of Styrenix Performance is 22.18, while 3 year average PE is 11.08. Also latest EV/EBITDA of Styrenix Performance is 15.04 while 3yr average is 7.32.
Has the share price of Styrenix Performance grown faster than its competition?
Styrenix Performance has given lower returns compared to its competitors. Styrenix Performance has grown at ~17.87% over the last 7yrs while peers have grown at a median rate of 23.9%
Is the promoter bullish about Styrenix Performance?
Promoters stake in the company seems stable, and we need to go through filings and allocation of resources to gauge promoter bullishness. Latest quarter promoter holding in Styrenix Performance is 46.24% and last quarter promoter holding is 46.24%.
Are mutual funds buying/selling Styrenix Performance?
The mutual fund holding of Styrenix Performance is increasing. The current mutual fund holding in Styrenix Performance is 9.12% while previous quarter holding is 8.33%.