US firm Huntsman Corporation is considering closing its Wilton International site where around 100 people work producing aniline
The American owner of a Teesside chemical plant is reportedly mulling its closure amid soaring energy costs. Approximately 100 people work at Huntsman’s Wilton International site, producing the versatile polymer used in everything from coatings to adhesives.
The company is led by chairman and chief executive officer Peter Huntsman, who assumed control of the family firm in 2000, having driven forward the acquisition of ICI’s industrial chemicals business the year before.
The Redcar factory is one of the last surviving plants of the former ICI group and Huntsman’s sole North East site, manufacturing aniline, a chemical used in a range of products including car seats, textiles, agricultural chemicals, herbicides, photographic chemicals and aircraft components.
However, bosses say sourcing basic raw materials in the UK can now cost up to seven times higher than overseas.
As a result, the company is reportedly contemplating shutting the Wilton plant if energy prices remain at current levels for the next three months. Mr Huntsman stated the recent surge in gas prices as a result of the Middle East conflict was proving to be “another nail in the coffin” for industry in Europe.
Last year the global business unveiled a $100m cost-cutting programme which included 600 job losses and the closure of seven sites in Europe. Huntsman Corporation, which has its headquarters in Texas, owns and operates more than 60 plants across the US, Europe, south-east Asia and the Middle East, but states that its UK and European sites are more exposed to international gas markets, where prices have climbed to their highest level since the start of the Ukrainian conflict.
Mr Huntsman stated: “You’re not seeing this in China, America or the Middle East, surprisingly, where the war is. You’re seeing it in the EU and the UK, and they’re being hit the hardest.”, reports Teesside Live.
“If today’s economics were to stay in place for the next three months, I would shut down my [UK] facility and I’d be importing product from China or the United States. Four years ago, my lowest cost aniline in the entire world came from the UK. That’s how recently I was competitive. Right now, this week, it is the most expensive.
“We used to have more investment in the UK than we did in North America. It was a vital footprint to our company. And today we’re down to one asset left there. I’ve laid off enough people in the UK that it is one of the greatest disappointments of my entire career.”
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