What is Petroleum Coke Powder
Analysts Sentiment
Bullish
30.1%
Neutral
21.4%
Bearish
48.5%
What's driving sentiment this week:
Past Week (2026-06-01 to 2026-06-07) — Sentiment: Bearish
OPEC+ agreement on June 7 to increase oil production for July by 188,000 b/d will raise refinery throughput and petroleum coke output, pressuring prices downward from the supply side.
Indian cement makers’ shift away from petroleum coke powder to thermal coal as of June 4 reduces key demand in an important consuming sector, exacerbating bearish volume and price pressure.
Geopolitical tensions around the Strait of Hormuz are raising energy and freight costs, but these upward cost pressures only marginally offset the supply and demand bearish effects this past week.
This Week (2026-06-08 to 2026-06-14) — Outlook: Neutral
Petroleum coke prices should stabilize as the market digests the increased supply from July refinery runs balanced against ongoing demand softness in India and cost headwinds from geopolitics.
The June 9 EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook will be the critical catalyst by refining expected global refinery run rates and petroleum coke production projections through mid-2026.
A stronger-than-expected downward revision in refinery runs or faster cement sector demand recovery would flip this into bearish or bullish territory respectively.
Key Market Impact
The dominant market force remains the supply boost from OPEC+ production adjustments pushing petroleum coke availability higher and capping price gains.
Traders and refiners are likely to price in abundant coke supply and reduced Indian demand, driving an extended period of muted price volatility and pressure on margins for petcoke producers.
How About the Price?
| Month | Price (USD/ton) | Change | Change Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-06-08 | 505 | 5 | 1% |
| 2026-05 | 500 | 5 | 1.01% |
| 2026-04 | 495 | 5 | 1.02% |
| 2026-03 | 490 | 5 | 1.03% |
| 2026-02 | 485 | 5 | 1.04% |
| 2026-01 | 480 | 5 | 1.05% |
| 2025-12 | 475 | 5 | 1.06% |
| 2025-11 | 470 | 5 | 1.08% |
| 2025-10 | 465 | 5 | 1.09% |
| 2025-09 | 460 | 5 | 1.1% |
| 2025-08 | 455 | 5 | 1.11% |
| 2025-07 | 450 | 5 | 1.12% |
| 2025-06 | 445 | 5 | 1.14% |
| 2025-05 | 440 | 5 | 1.15% |
| 2025-04 | 435 | 5 | 1.16% |
| 2025-03 | 430 | 5 | 1.18% |
| 2025-02 | 425 | 5 | 1.19% |
| 2025-01 | 420 | 5 | 1.2% |
| 2024-12 | 415 | 5 | 1.22% |
| 2024-11 | 410 | 5 | 1.23% |
| 2024-10 | 405 | 5 | 1.25% |
| 2024-09 | 400 | 5 | 1.27% |
| 2024-08 | 395 | 5 | 1.28% |
| 2024-07 | 390 | 5 | 1.3% |
| 2024-06 | 385 | 5 | 1.32% |
| 2024-05 | 380 | 5 | 1.33% |
| 2024-04 | 375 | 5 | 1.35% |
| 2024-03 | 370 | 5 | 1.37% |
| 2024-02 | 365 | 5 | 1.39% |
| 2024-01 | 360 | 5 | 1.41% |
| 2023-12 | 355 | 5 | 1.43% |
| 2023-11 | 350 | 5 | 1.45% |
| 2023-10 | 345 | 5 | 1.47% |
| 2023-09 | 340 | 5 | 1.49% |
| 2023-08 | 335 | 5 | 1.52% |
| 2023-07 | 330 | 5 | 1.54% |
| 2023-06 | 325 | 5 | 1.56% |
| 2023-05 | 320 | 5 | 1.59% |
| 2023-04 | 315 | 5 | 1.61% |
| 2023-03 | 310 | 5 | 1.64% |
| 2023-02 | 305 | 5 | 1.67% |
| 2023-01 | 300 | 5 | 1.69% |
| 2022-12 | 295 | 5 | 1.72% |
| 2022-11 | 290 | 5 | 1.75% |
| 2022-10 | 285 | 5 | 1.79% |
| 2022-09 | 280 | 5 | 1.82% |
| 2022-08 | 275 | 5 | 1.85% |
| 2022-07 | 270 | 5 | 1.89% |
| 2022-06 | 265 | 5 | 1.92% |
| 2022-05 | 260 | 5 | 1.96% |
| 2022-04 | 255 | 5 | 2% |
| 2022-03 | 250 | 5 | 2.04% |
| 2022-02 | 245 | 5 | 2.08% |
| 2022-01 | 240 | 5 | 2.13% |
| 2021-12 | 235 | 5 | 2.17% |
| 2021-11 | 230 | 5 | 2.22% |
| 2021-10 | 225 | 5 | 2.27% |
| 2021-09 | 220 | 5 | 2.33% |
| 2021-08 | 215 | 5 | 2.38% |
| 2021-07 | 210 | 5 | 2.44% |
| 2021-06 | 205 | 5 | 2.5% |
| 2021-05 | 200 | 5 | 2.56% |
| 2021-04 | 195 | 5 | 2.63% |
| 2021-03 | 190 | 5 | 2.7% |
| 2021-02 | 185 | 5 | 2.78% |
| 2021-01 | 180 | 5 | 2.86% |
| 2020-12 | 175 | 5 | 2.94% |
| 2020-11 | 170 | 5 | 3.03% |
| 2020-10 | 165 | 5 | 3.12% |
| 2020-09 | 160 | 5 | 3.23% |
| 2020-08 | 155 | 4.5 | 2.99% |
| 2020-07 | 150.5 | 5.5 | 3.79% |
| 2020-06 | 145 | 5 | 3.57% |
| 2020-05 | 140 | 4.5 | 3.32% |
| 2020-04 | 135.5 | 5.3 | 4.07% |
| 2020-03 | 130.2 | 4.4 | 3.5% |
| 2020-02 | 125.8 | 5.3 | 4.4% |
| 2020-01 | 120.5 | 0 | 0% |
Price Trajectory 2020–2026 (Brief Recap)
Phase 1 — Steady Incremental Rise (2020-01 to 2020-12): Prices gradually increased from $120.5 in January 2020 to $175.0 in December 2020, driven by typical market conditions without extraordinary influencing events noted.
Phase 2 — Continued Gradual Increase (2021-01 to 2022-12): Prices sustained an upward trend from $180.0 in January 2021 to $295.0 in December 2022, reflecting ongoing supply-demand balance with no disruptive events indicated in the influence log.
Phase 3 — Moderate Growth Continuation (2023-01 to 2025-06): Prices steadily rose from $300.0 in January 2023 to $445.0 by June 2025; consistent monthly increases suggest stable incremental market pressures without reported external shocks.
Phase 4 — Projected Incremental Growth (2025-07 to 2026-06): Prices expected to continue rising from $450.0 in July 2025 to $505.0 by early June 2026, presuming continuation of existing trends absent influence log events.
Supply-side factors
- No supply-side events or influences recorded in the provided log; stable production assumed.
Demand-side factors
- No demand-side events or influences recorded in the provided log; demand assumed stable.
Substitutes & Alternatives
| Substitute | Replacement Scenario / How It Substitutes |
|---|---|
| Coal (Bituminous / Anthracite) Powder | The most common fuel substitute in cement kilns, power boilers, and industrial furnaces. Coal powder can replace petcoke powder on a heat-equivalent basis (co-firing or full substitution), though its lower calorific value (~25–30 MJ/kg vs. 33–36 MJ/kg for petcoke) requires higher feed rates. Switching is straightforward where existing pulverizing and combustion equipment is compatible; sulfur and ash emissions profiles differ and may require burner or scrubber adjustments. |
| Biomass / Torrefied Biomass Powder | Used as a partial or full substitute for petcoke in cement kilns and industrial boilers as a lower-carbon or carbon-neutral fuel. Typically blended at 10–30% substitution rates due to lower energy density and higher moisture. Requires modifications to feeding systems and may affect flame temperature; used primarily where carbon emission regulations or sustainability targets apply. |
| Coal Tar Pitch Coke (Pitch Coke) | Substitutes calcined petcoke powder in carbon anode manufacturing for aluminum smelting and in graphite electrode production. Pitch coke offers similar fixed carbon content and crystalline structure. Used when petcoke supply is constrained or when specific crystallinity or sulfur specifications favor pitch coke; typically a drop-in substitute in anode paste formulations with minor recipe adjustments. |
| Anthracite Coal (Recarburizer Grade) | Substitutes petcoke powder as a recarburizer in electric arc furnace (EAF) steelmaking and foundry applications. Anthracite has high fixed carbon (90–95%) and low sulfur, making it a close functional substitute. It is used when petcoke sulfur content is too high for steel quality requirements; the substitution is essentially drop-in at equivalent carbon addition rates. |
| Graphite Scrap / Synthetic Graphite Powder | Substitutes calcined petcoke powder as a high-purity recarburizer in premium steel and cast iron production where very low sulfur (<0.05%) and high carbon recovery are required. Graphite scrap from electrode manufacturing is used as a drop-in substitute; it commands a price premium but delivers superior carbon recovery rates (up to 95% vs. 85–90% for petcoke). |
| Natural Gas / Heavy Fuel Oil | Substitutes petcoke powder as a fuel in cement kilns and industrial furnaces where solid fuel handling infrastructure is unavailable or where emissions regulations restrict solid fuel use. The substitution requires burner conversion from solid to gaseous or liquid fuel; it eliminates grinding and pneumatic conveying systems but increases fuel cost per unit of heat delivered. |
| Waste-Derived Fuels (RDF / SRF) | Refuse-derived fuel or solid recovered fuel can partially substitute petcoke powder in cement kiln co-processing, typically at 20–60% thermal substitution rates. This is driven by waste management economics and carbon cost reduction rather than technical equivalence; requires dedicated feeding systems and regulatory permits for waste co-processing. |
Regulatory Status
| Region | Regulation / Policy Name | Issuing Authority | Year (enacted or latest revision) | Key Requirement / Threshold | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| China | High Pollution Fuel Catalogue | Ministry of Ecology and Environment | 2017 | Petroleum coke is classified as a high-pollution fuel and prohibited for combustion in high-pollution fuel ban zones | Ministry of Ecology and Environment of China |
| China | Action Plan on Energy Conservation and Carbon Reduction for 2024-2025 | State Council / Ministry of Ecology and Environment | 2024 | Prohibition on use of petroleum coke with sulfur content greater than 3% as fuel in key regions including Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei, Yangtze River Delta, and Fenwei Plain (except in existing petrochemical generation units) | Ministry of Ecology and Environment of China |
| India | Import Policy Condition 6 for Pet Coke under ITC (HS) Chapter 27 | Central Government / Directorate General of Foreign Trade | 2023 | Import of pet coke for fuel purpose is prohibited | Ministry of Commerce and Industry, India |
| US | 40 CFR Part 60 Subpart J - Standards of Performance for Petroleum Refineries | US EPA | 2008 | SO2 emissions from fluid catalytic cracking unit catalyst regenerators limited to 9.8 kg/Mg (20 lb/ton) coke burn-off or less than or equal to 50 ppmv with controls | 40 CFR Part 60 Subpart J (eCFR) |
| US | 40 CFR Part 60 Subpart UUUU - Standards of Performance for Greenhouse Gas Emissions for Petroleum Refineries | US EPA | 2012 | Reporting requirements for greenhouse gas emissions from petroleum refineries, including petcoke handling and combustion-related sources | 40 CFR Part 60 Subpart UUUU (eCFR) |
| EU | Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006 (REACH) Annex VI | European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) | 2006 (with harmonised classifications in Annex VI) | Petroleum coke (Coke (petroleum), EC/List No. 265-080-3) is a registered substance with harmonised classification under CLP Regulation (GHS) | ECHA Substance Information Page and EUR-Lex |
| International | IMDG Code | International Maritime Organization | 2018 (latest consolidated edition) | Petroleum coke is not classified as a dangerous good; no UN number, hazard class, or packing group required for transport | IMDG Code (IMO) |
Key Influence Events
Petroleum coke powder (petcoke powder) is a finely ground carbonaceous solid derived from the thermal cracking and coking of heavy petroleum residues, primarily vacuum residue and atmospheric residue from crude oil refining. It consists predominantly of carbon (90–97 wt%), with varying levels of sulfur, metals (vanadium, nickel), and ash depending on the crude oil source and coking process used. The powder form is produced by crushing and milling green or calcined petroleum coke to particle sizes typically below 200 mesh (75 µm). It is used as a fuel in cement kilns, power plants, and industrial boilers, as a carbon source in aluminum smelting anodes, in the manufacture of graphite electrodes, and as a recarburizer in steelmaking.
Top Countries Production Capacity
Production Process of Petroleum Coke Powder
Petroleum coke powder (petcoke powder) is a finely ground carbonaceous solid derived from the thermal cracking and coking of heavy petroleum residues, primarily vacuum residue and atmospheric residue from crude oil refining. It consists predominantly of carbon (90–97 wt%), with varying levels of sulfur, metals (vanadium, nickel), and ash depending on the crude oil source and coking process used. The powder form is produced by crushing and milling green or calcined petroleum coke to particle sizes typically below 200 mesh (75 µm). It is used as a fuel in cement kilns, power plants, and industrial boilers, as a carbon source in aluminum smelting anodes, in the manufacture of graphite electrodes, and as a recarburizer in steelmaking.
Specs & Grades
| Property | Typical Value / Range | Unit | Grade / Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed Carbon | 88–97 | wt% | Fuel grade / Calcined grade |
| Sulfur Content | 0.5–7.0 | wt% | Low-S (<3%) / High-S (>3%) |
| Ash Content | 0.1–1.5 | wt% | Anode grade / Fuel grade |
| Volatile Matter | 8–12 (green); <0.5 (calcined) | wt% | Green petcoke / Calcined petcoke |
| Moisture | 0.5–10 | wt% | As-received basis |
| Vanadium | 50–2000 | ppm | Fuel grade (high V acceptable); Anode grade (<250 ppm) |
| Nickel | 20–500 | ppm | Fuel grade / Anode grade (<200 ppm) |
| Calorific Value (GCV) | 32–36 | MJ/kg | Fuel grade |
| Real Density (calcined) | 2.04–2.10 | g/cm³ | Anode / Electrode grade |
| Electrical Resistivity (calcined) | 450–600 | µΩ·m | Electrode / Anode grade |
| Particle Size (powder) | D90 <75 µm (200 mesh) or D50 <45 µm | µm | Fuel injection / Recarburizer |
| Hardgrove Grindability Index (HGI) | 35–75 | — | Fuel grade (higher = easier to grind) |
Who are the Top Players?
| Company | Headquarters | Key Facilities |
|---|---|---|
| Oxbow Carbon LLC | Spring, Texas, USA | Kremlin OK, Baton Rouge LA, Port Arthur TX |
| Rain Carbon Inc. | Stamford, Connecticut, USA | Chalmette LA, Lake Charles LA, Norco LA, Robinson IL, Visakhapatnam Andhra Pradesh India, Atchutapuram Andhra Pradesh India |
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