Petrochemical Duty Relief Amid Crisis
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General Studies Paper II: Government Policies & Interventions, Industrial Growth |
Why in News?
Recently, India removed import duties on about 40 petrochemical products as a temporary relief amid the West Asia crisis, aiming to ease supply disruptions and stabilize pharmaceuticals industries.
The exemption is temporary (till June 30, 2026), showing a targeted policy response to a short-term geopolitical shock.

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Note: The government also removed the Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess (AIDC) on Ammonium Nitrate. The Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) estimates a revenue loss of ₹1,800 crore over the three-month period. |
What are Petrochemical Products?
- About: Petrochemicals are chemical compounds derived from petroleum and natural gas, distinct from fuels. They form the backbone of modern industry.
- Raw Materials (Feedstock): The primary inputs include crude oil fractions (naphtha) and natural gas liquids (ethane, propane, butane).
- In India, naphtha-based cracking dominates, while countries like the U.S. rely heavily on ethane from shale gas, making production cheaper.
- Chemical Composition: Petrochemicals are primarily hydrocarbons (carbon + hydrogen compounds).
- They may also include derivatives containing oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, enhancing functionality for diverse industrial uses.
- Classification: They are broadly classified into Olefins (ethylene, propylene), Aromatics (benzene, toluene, xylene), and Synthesis gas derivatives. Olefins dominate plastics production, while aromatics are key for fibers and resins.
- Production Processes: Key processes include steam cracking (for olefins), catalytic reforming (for aromatics), and fluid catalytic cracking. These energy-intensive methods convert hydrocarbons into high-value chemical intermediates.
- Value Chain Structure: The petrochemical industry follows a three-tier value chain: upstream (feedstock extraction), midstream (basic chemicals like ethylene), and downstream (end products like plastics, rubber).
- Applications: Petrochemicals are used in plastics, fertilizers, synthetic fibers, detergents, pharmaceuticals, packaging, and electronics.
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- These base chemicals are converted into polymers (polyethylene, PVC, PET), synthetic fibers (nylon, polyester), and rubbers.
- Everyday items like packaging, mobile phones, medical equipment, and fertilizers depend heavily on petrochemicals.
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- Polyethylene is widely used in packaging, while polyesters dominate textiles.
- Importance: Petrochemicals reduce dependence on finished imports by strengthening domestic manufacturing.
- Petrochemicals contribute significantly to industrial GDP and manufacturing growth, especially in Asia-Pacific.
- They enable low-cost mass production, making them essential for developing economies like India and China.
- Market Growth: The petrochemical sector is a high-value industry with strong forward linkages. Globally, it contributes over $5 trillion to economic output indirectly, supporting sectors such as automobiles, construction, and FMCG.
- India is one of the fastest-growing petrochemical markets, yet imports nearly 30% of its demand. In India, demand is growing at 8% annually.
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- Demand is expected to double by 2040 globally, driven by urbanization and consumption.
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- Environmental Concerns: Petrochemicals contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, plastic pollution, and resource depletion.
- Energy-intensive production and waste disposal create long-term environmental risks.
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- The sector accounts for about 10–12% of global oil demand growth.
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- Alternatives: Emerging alternatives include bio-based chemicals (from sugarcane, corn), bioplastics, recycled materials, and natural fibers.
- The bioplastics market alone is projected to reach $30.8 billion by 2028, reflecting a sustainability shift.
Why India Removed Petrochemical Import Duty?
- Feedstock Cost Relief: The crisis triggered a 50% surge in global crude oil prices since late February 2026, driving Brent crude above $100 per barrel. Duty removal on key feedstocks like Naphtha, Methanol, and Toluene helps domestic refineries and chemical plants absorb these spiking input costs.
- Supply Chain Security: With the Strait of Hormuz—through which 20% of global oil and nearly half of India’s crude passes—facing potential closure, India must diversify its supply routes. The duty waiver facilitates sourcing from alternative global markets to fill the 20% import gap in India’s 52 million tonne annual petrochemical demand.
- Protecting Downstream MSMEs: Labour-intensive sectors like plastics and packaging, dominated by MSMEs, have thin margins and low pricing power. Zero-duty imports on PVC, Polyethylene, and Polypropylene prevent a liquidity crunch and sustain production levels for these small-scale units.
- Curbing Retail Inflation: Petrochemicals are essential raw materials for 90% of manufactured goods, including detergents and clothing. By waiving duties, the government prevents “cost-push” inflation, helping to stabilize the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and protect household purchasing power.
- Healthcare Sector Support: Critical pharmaceutical intermediates such as Phenol and Acetic Acid are now exempt from duty. These are vital for manufacturing life-saving drugs and medical packaging, ensuring that healthcare costs do not escalate.
- Investor Market Stability: Providing “temporary and targeted” fiscal relief signals a pro-growth stance to the capital markets. This helps maintain investor confidence and ensures that long-term Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in large-scale infrastructure projects remains on schedule.
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Government Initiatives for Petrochemical Industry
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Also Read: Dated Brent Crude Futures |