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“Naphtha: The Lifeblood of Global Industry — From Byproduct to Strategic Material, Driving Plastics, EVs, and a Sustainable Future” SO OK TRADING | 2 May 2026

Last updated: 2 May 2026
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 Naphtha: From Byproduct to “Strategic Material” of Global Industry
SO OK TRADING | 2 May 2026

 
What is Naphtha
Naphtha is a liquid hydrocarbon product derived from crude oil refining. It is highly volatile, flammable, and contains 5–12 carbon atoms. Once considered a mere byproduct, today it plays a crucial role in petrochemicals, plastics, textiles, fuels, and the fast-growing electric vehicle (EV) industry.

 
Types of Naphtha
Light Naphtha: Boiling point 30–90°C, carbon number 5–6 → Produces ethylene and propylene → Packaging plastics, synthetic rubber
Heavy Naphtha: Boiling point 90–200°C, carbon number 6–12 → Produces aromatics (benzene, xylene) → Synthetic fibers, engineering plastics
 
Applications of Naphtha
Plastics & Synthetic Rubber: PE, PP → Plastic bags, PET bottles, food films, car bumpers, tires
Textiles & Fibers: Polyester, Nylon → Clothing, fishing nets, ropes
Fuels & Energy: Octane booster in gasoline, lighter fuel, aviation fuel
Industrial Chemicals: Solvents in paints, varnishes, adhesives, cleaning agents
Agriculture & Others: Ammonia production → Urea fertilizer, pharmaceutical and cosmetic ingredients
 
Demand
68% of global naphtha is consumed in petrochemicals
CAGR 3.8–4.4% growth projected until 2030
Asia-Pacific (China, India) holds 43.5% of global market share
Pressure: Low cracker margins, some plants switching to LPG
Support: Strong demand for food packaging, beverages, and electronics plastics
 
Supply
Major producers: Middle East, North America
China: Massive capacity expansion → Oversupply, price and spread pressure
Risks: Middle East conflicts, Russia–Ukraine war → Supply disruptions
Structural adjustments: Japan, South Korea, EU closing or downsizing old plants
 
Usage Trends (2025–2026)
Thailand: Market recovery driven by tourism and consumption, though household debt remains a drag → Demand from plastics and packaging
EV & Lightweighting: Engineering plastics from naphtha increasingly used in auto parts → bumpers, consoles, wire insulation
Circular Economy: Chemical recycling → Recycled naphtha with quality equal to virgin plastic
Bio-Naphtha: Producers blending bio-feedstock to reduce carbon footprint
 
Major Players in Thailand
PTT GC: Integrated production from naphtha to plastic resins
SCGC: Focus on circular naphtha and engineering plastics
IRPC: Specialty plastics for automotive and electronics
Thai Oil (TOP): Produces naphtha from crude refining for petrochemical plants
 
Market Battle: Naphtha vs Bioplastics
Price: Naphtha-based plastics remain cheaper (economies of scale)
Performance: Bioplastics still less durable
Adaptation: Producers blending bio-feedstock → Bio-Naphtha
 
Conclusion
✨ Naphtha is transforming from “fuel” into a “strategic material” driving the plastics and EV industries of the future. Demand is fueled by plastics and EVs, while supply faces pressure from China’s overcapacity and geopolitical risks.

 
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