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Navigating European chemicals: Part two

Navigating European chemicals: Part two

April 17, 2025

Finding the middle ground between economic realities and sustainability imperatives

Europe's chemicals industry stands at a crossroads. As the oldest and most established chemicals sector globally, continued growth requires leaders to navigate complex challenges including volatile feedstock prices, soaring energy costs, evolving end-markets, increased imports, stringent regulations, and sustainability demands.

Chemical lab equipment
Europe's chemical industry is oldest and most established chemicals sector globally but continued growth requires leaders to navigate complex challenges.

Recent market signals point toward a pragmatic balance where economic necessities and environmental priorities find middle ground. European policymakers are likely to pursue a two-pronged strategy: easing immediate market pressures on chemicals companies while introducing targeted incentives for sustainable transformation.

This balanced approach recognizes both the industry's critical economic importance—Europe's chemicals sector is its largest manufacturing industry with sales reaching EUR 760 billion in 2022—and the imperative of meeting ambitious sustainability targets.

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Key challenges reshaping the landscape

Six fundamental drivers are transforming the European chemicals ecosystem:

  1. Feedstock volatility: Europe's dependence on imported crude oil has led to significant cost pressures following global supply disruptions
  2. Persistent energy price gaps: Despite some stabilization, European energy costs remain structurally higher than competing regions
  3. Sluggish end-market growth: Traditional markets like automotive and construction are not expected to see significant growth over the next five years.
  4. Rising competitive imports: China now holds 44% of global market share, with subsidized exports challenging European producers
  5. Regulatory complexity: Multiple EU and national regulations create compliance costs despite some recent regulatory easing
  6. Sustainability transition: Meeting emissions reduction targets requires substantial investments in decarbonization

Europe's chemicals production has struggled to recover since 2022, with production indices remaining in negative territory.
Europe's chemicals production has struggled to recover since 2022, with production indices remaining in negative territory.
"The European chemicals sector isn't facing extinction, but transformation. The path forward requires a pragmatic approach that acknowledges both economic realities and sustainability imperatives."
Portrait of Frank Steffen
Partner
Munich Office, Central Europe

Specialties and consumer chemicals show highest resilience

Not all segments will be equally impacted by these market dynamics. Specialty and consumer chemicals demonstrate the strongest resilience due to their application-specific nature and localized demand patterns.

"While base chemicals face structural challenges in Europe, specialty and consumer segments offer fertile ground for innovation and growth. The industry's future will be built on value, not volume." Christian Lumpe, Partner

Europe's challenge is that petrochemicals—characterized by low differentiation and rising costs—represent a significant portion of its chemicals industry yet show poor resilience to future market conditions.

Specialties and consumer chemicals will be best positioned to withstand the headwinds, while European strongholds in base chemicals will have to adapt
Specialties and consumer chemicals will be best positioned to withstand the headwinds, while European strongholds in base chemicals will have to adapt

Strategic imperatives for European chemicals companies

To succeed in this evolving landscape, chemicals companies should prioritize five key strategies:

  1. Shift toward specialty portfolios: Focus on difficult-to-replicate products where value-based pricing provides insulation from cost pressures
  2. Target growing end-markets: Realign toward semiconductors, battery materials , pharmaceuticals , and premium consumer goods
  3. Embrace customer co-creation: Develop collaborative relationships that position companies as solution providers rather than commodity suppliers
  4. Implement phased sustainability transformation: Balance short-term competitiveness with long-term positioning through a structured approach
  5. Build adaptive organizational capabilities: Develop structures designed for rapid response to changing market conditions

With these approaches, Europe's chemicals companies can transform challenges into opportunities, securing their position in an industry undergoing fundamental change.

Want deeper insights into the future of European chemicals?

Our comprehensive report provides detailed analysis of market trends, competitive dynamics, and strategic opportunities for chemicals companies.

For a better understanding of the challenges and opportunities in the European industries from a value chain perspective, be sure to check out Navigating European Chemicals: Part 1 .

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Navigating European chemicals: Part two

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Discover how your company can transform challenges into competitive advantages in Europe's evolving chemicals landscape.

Published April 2025. Available in
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