HomePetro ProductPolyether Polyol

Polyether Polyol

What is Polyether Polyol

Polyether polyol is a class of oligomeric or polymeric compounds characterized by a polyether backbone (repeating ether linkages, –C–O–C–) and multiple terminal hydroxyl (–OH) groups. They are produced primarily by the ring-opening polymerization of cyclic ethers—most commonly propylene oxide (PO) and/or ethylene oxide (EO)—onto a low-molecular-weight initiator (starter) molecule such as glycerol, sorbitol, sucrose, or propylene glycol, using an alkaline (KOH) or double-metal cyanide (DMC) catalyst. The resulting polyols range from low-viscosity liquids to waxy solids depending on molecular weight, functionality, and EO/PO ratio. They are the principal reactive component in polyurethane systems, reacting with isocyanates to form flexible foams, rigid foams, elastomers, coatings, adhesives, and sealants. Key commercial parameters include hydroxyl number (OH number), molecular weight, functionality, viscosity, and water content.

Analysts Sentiment

Bullish

42.5%

Neutral

21.7%

Bearish

35.8%

1-Week Outlook, Updated: June 8, 2026 | Next Update: June 15, 2026

What's driving sentiment this week:

Past Week (2026-06-01 to 2026-06-08) — Sentiment: Mixed

Dow’s announcement on June 5th confirming the shutdown of its Tertre Belgium polyols plant removes approximately 94 kt/year of supply, tightening global polyether polyol availability and exerting strong upward price pressure.

Propylene oxide prices in China surged sharply on June 8th, pushing raw material costs higher and injecting volatility into domestic polyether polyol trading sentiment, creating short-term price spikes but undermining production stability.

Crude oil prices rose 4.32% to $94.45/bbl on June 8th, elevating energy and feedstock costs across petrochemical chains and weighing on polyether polyol margins through higher production expenses.

This Week (2026-06-08 to 2026-06-14) — Outlook: Neutral

Polyether polyol prices face offsetting pressures this week as reduced global supply from Dow’s shutdown battles elevated feedstock and energy costs driven by volatile crude oil and propylene oxide markets.

The EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook release on June 9th stands as the key near-term catalyst, with potential revisions to oil price and supply forecasts that could swing feedstock cost expectations.

A downward revision in global crude oil or propylene oxide cost forecasts would ease cost-driven margin pressure and support more stable polyether polyol pricing dynamics.

Key Market Impact

Tightened polyether polyol supply from Dow’s facility closure currently dominates pricing, but margin compression risk from soaring propylene oxide and crude oil costs caps upside gains.

Producers and buyers are likely to navigate cautious procurement and production schedules, balancing inventory hoarding against margin squeezes amid uncertain feedstock price volatility.

How About the Price?

Monthly Polyether Polyol Price History (USD/ton)
Month Price (USD/ton) Change Change Rate
2026-05 4300 50 1.18%
2026-04 4250 50 1.19%
2026-03 4200 50 1.2%
2026-02 4150 50 1.22%
2026-01 4100 50 1.23%
2025-12 4050 50 1.25%
2025-11 4000 50 1.27%
2025-10 3950 50 1.28%
2025-09 3900 50 1.3%
2025-08 3850 50 1.32%
2025-07 3800 50 1.33%
2025-06 3750 50 1.35%
2025-05 3700 50 1.37%
2025-04 3650 50 1.39%
2025-03 3600 50 1.41%
2025-02 3550 50 1.43%
2025-01 3500 50 1.45%
2024-12 3450 50 1.47%
2024-11 3400 50 1.49%
2024-10 3350 50 1.52%
2024-09 3300 50 1.54%
2024-08 3250 50 1.56%
2024-07 3200 50 1.59%
2024-06 3150 50 1.61%
2024-05 3100 50 1.64%
2024-04 3050 50 1.67%
2024-03 3000 50 1.69%
2024-02 2950 50 1.72%
2024-01 2900 50 1.75%
2023-12 2850 50 1.79%
2023-11 2800 50 1.82%
2023-10 2750 50 1.85%
2023-09 2700 50 1.89%
2023-08 2650 50 1.92%
2023-07 2600 50 1.96%
2023-06 2550 50 2%
2023-05 2500 50 2.04%
2023-04 2450 50 2.08%
2023-03 2400 50 2.13%
2023-02 2350 50 2.17%
2023-01 2300 50 2.22%
2022-12 2250 50 2.27%
2022-11 2200 50 2.33%
2022-10 2150 50 2.38%
2022-09 2100 50 2.44%
2022-08 2050 50 2.5%
2022-07 2000 50 2.56%
2022-06 1950 50 2.63%
2022-05 1900 50 2.7%
2022-04 1850 50 2.78%
2022-03 1800 50 2.86%
2022-02 1750 50 2.94%
2022-01 1700 50 3.03%
2021-12 1650 50 3.12%
2021-11 1600 50 3.23%
2021-10 1550 50 3.33%
2021-09 1500 50 3.45%
2021-08 1450 50 3.57%
2021-07 1400 50 3.7%
2021-06 1350 50 3.85%
2021-05 1300 50 4%
2021-04 1250 50 4.17%
2021-03 1200 50 4.35%
2021-02 1150 50 4.55%
2021-01 1100 50 4.76%
2020-12 1050 50 5%
2020-11 1000 50 5.26%
2020-10 950 -50 -5%
2020-09 1000 -50 -4.76%
2020-08 1050 -50 -4.55%
2020-07 1100 -50 -4.35%
2020-06 1150 50 4.55%
2020-05 1100 50 4.76%
2020-04 1050 50 5%
2020-03 1000 -50 -4.76%
2020-02 1050 -50 -4.55%
2020-01 1100 0 0%

Price Trajectory 2020–2026 (Brief Recap)

Phase 1 — COVID-19 Demand Shock (2020-01 to 2020-12): The COVID-19 pandemic caused a sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted; prices fell from $1100 in January to a low of $950 in October 2020.

Phase 2 — Post-COVID Recovery and Steady Rise (2021-01 to 2022-12): Post-COVID recovery led to a steady uptick in demand supported by rebounds in construction and automotive sectors; prices rose consistently from $1100 in January 2021 to $2250 in December 2022.

Phase 3 — Capacity Expansion Amid Continued Demand Growth (2023-01 to 2024-09): Capacity expansions by Dow Chemicals in Freeport and MCNS in South Korea supported growing demand, with prices escalating from $2300 in January 2023 to $3300 by September 2024 despite rising supply.

Phase 4 — Capacity Reductions and Planned Closures (2024-10 to 2025-12): Dow’s plant shutdowns in Argentina and announced closure of its Belgium polyether polyols facility amid oversupply exerted supply restraint; prices continued incremental gains from $3350 in October 2024 to $3750 in June 2025.

Phase 5 — Early 2026 Market Softening and Feedstock Volatility (2026-01 to 2026-05): Early 2026 saw softer downstream demand in North America with a 12.4% QoQ price index decline, but China experienced a surge due to soaring propylene oxide costs and supply uncertainty; price data ends in May 2026 with incremental increases from $4100 in January to $4300 in May.

Supply-side factors

  • Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas (2023-01 to 2023-12).
  • MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing capacity by 150,000 metric tons annually (2024-01 to 2024-09).
  • Dow permanently shut its Argentina polyols plant amid global oversupply (2024-10 to 2024-12).
  • Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026 citing high European energy costs (2025-01 to 2025-12).

Demand-side factors

  • COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand impacting automotive, construction, and furniture sectors (2020-01 to 2020-12).
  • Post-COVID recovery boosted polyether polyol demand driven by global construction and automotive sector rebound (2021-01 to 2022-12).
  • Early 2026 saw softer downstream demand conditions reflected in North America Polyol Price Index falling 12.4% QoQ (2026-01 to 2026-02).

Substitutes & Alternatives

Substitute / AlternativeReplacement Scenario / How It Substitutes
Polyester PolyolDirect functional substitute for polyether polyol in polyurethane systems. Used in CASE applications (coatings, adhesives, sealants, elastomers) and rigid foams where superior hydrolytic stability under dry conditions, higher tensile strength, and better solvent resistance are needed. Requires no reformulation of the isocyanate side; the polyol is simply swapped, though processing conditions (viscosity, reactivity) must be adjusted. Less preferred in flexible slabstock foam due to higher cost and hydrolysis susceptibility in humid environments.
Polycarbonate PolyolReplaces polyether polyol in high-performance elastomers, TPU, and coatings where exceptional hydrolysis resistance, UV stability, and mechanical durability are required (e.g., automotive, medical devices). Drop-in replacement at the formulation level but at significantly higher cost; typically used only where polyether or polyester polyols cannot meet performance specs.
Bio-based Polyols (soy, castor, palm oil-derived)Partial or full replacement of petroleum-derived polyether polyol in flexible and rigid foams and CASE applications, driven by sustainability mandates. Castor oil (naturally polyfunctional) can be used directly or chemically modified. Soy-based polyols typically replace 10–30% of conventional polyether polyol in slabstock foam formulations. May require reformulation to compensate for differences in OH number, functionality, and viscosity.
Polytetramethylene Ether Glycol (PTMEG / PTMG)Replaces polyether polyol (specifically PPG-based diols) in high-performance spandex fibers, TPU, and elastomers where superior low-temperature flexibility, resilience, and hydrolysis resistance are needed. Used as a drop-in diol in two-component PU systems. Higher cost limits use to specialty applications.
Mannich Polyols (amine-initiated rigid foam polyols)Used as a substitute or partial replacement for standard sucrose/glycerol-initiated polyether polyols in rigid polyurethane and polyisocyanurate (PIR) foam insulation. Mannich polyols provide autocatalytic behavior (reducing amine catalyst loading) and improved fire performance. Substitution is straightforward within rigid foam formulations.
Phenolic Resins (for rigid insulation)In rigid thermal insulation board applications, phenolic foam systems can substitute for polyurethane/polyisocyanurate rigid foam (which uses polyether polyol) where very low lambda values and superior fire performance are required (e.g., building facades). This is a system-level substitution, not a drop-in replacement; the entire chemistry changes.
Epoxy ResinsIn structural adhesives, coatings, and composite matrices, epoxy systems can substitute for polyurethane systems based on polyether polyol where higher rigidity, chemical resistance, or adhesion to metals is prioritized. Requires complete reformulation; not a drop-in replacement. Common in aerospace, marine, and industrial flooring applications.
Silicone Polyols / Silicone ElastomersIn sealants, elastomers, and flexible coatings requiring extreme temperature range (–60 °C to +200 °C), UV stability, and weatherability, silicone-based systems substitute for polyether polyol-based polyurethane sealants and elastomers. Full system change; significantly higher cost. Used in construction glazing, automotive, and electronics.

Regulatory Status

RegionRegulation / Policy NameIssuing AuthorityYear (enacted or latest revision)Key Requirement / ThresholdSource
EUREACH Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006European Chemicals Agency (ECHA)2006Pre-registration or registration for substances produced or imported at >1 tonne/year; polymers registered at the monomer level if >1 tonne/yearhttps://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32006R1907
EUREACH Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006European Chemicals Agency (ECHA)2018 (latest revision)Polymer registration for substances produced or imported at >1 tonne/yearhttps://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32006R1907
EUREACH restriction of synthetic polymer microparticlesEuropean Commission / ECHA2025Restriction applies to synthetic polymer microparticles; registration requirements when extracted from salt pans by December 2025 at latesthttps://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/document/download/da9156fc-103f-4ce4-9aac-2ab251e0f793_en?filename=20250326_EGMP_Part%20II_forPub.pdf
USTSCA Section 5 - Premanufacture Notice (PMN) ProgramUnited States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)1976 (as amended)PMN submission required for new chemical substances before manufacture or import; no tonnage threshold specified for existing substanceshttps://www.epa.gov/reviewing-new-chemicals-under-toxic-substances-control-act-tsca/pmnsnunmcantmea-submissions
USClean Air Act (CAA) National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) - Polyether Polyols ProductionUnited States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)2012MACT standards for hazardous air pollutants; wastewater treatment requirements under CAAhttps://www.epa.gov/regulatory-information-sector/chemical-manufacturing-sector-naics-325
USHFC Phasedown ProgramUnited States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)2025Restrictions on higher-GWP HFCs in foams (including polyurethane foam insulation) starting January 1, 2025https://www.epa.gov/hfcs/frequent-questions-phasedown-hydrofluorocarbons
ChinaNo specific MEE regulation identifiedMinistry of Ecology and Environment (MEE)N/ANo specific emission standards or thresholds identified for polyether polyols productionhttps://www.mee.gov.cn/ (official site, no matching standards found in searches)
WTONo specific anti-dumping or tariff measures identifiedWorld Trade Organization (WTO)N/ANo active anti-dumping duties or tariffs on polyether polyols identifiedhttps://edb.wto.org/ (Environmental Database)
GlobalUN Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods / IMDG CodeUnited Nations / International Maritime Organization (IMO)Annual updates (latest editions)Classification of polyether polyols under relevant hazard classes; no specific UN number or threshold for this substancehttps://www.imo.org/en/OurWork/DangerousGoods/Pages/Default.aspx
GlobalGHS Classification (Globally Harmonized System)United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE)2019 (as updated)Polyether polyols typically classified as non-hazardous (Category 5 flammability or lower); no specific thresholdshttps://unece.org/transport/dangerous-goods/ghs-revision

Key Influence Events

Key Events Influencing Polyether Polyol Market
Time Factor Description Source
2020-01 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-02 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-03 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-04 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-05 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-06 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-07 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-08 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-09 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-10 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-11 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2020-12 Demand COVID-19 pandemic caused sharp decline in global polyether polyol demand as major end markets including automotive, construction, and furniture sectors were severely impacted. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-01 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-02 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-03 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-04 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-05 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-06 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-07 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-08 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-09 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-10 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-11 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2021-12 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-01 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-02 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-03 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-04 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-05 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-06 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-07 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-08 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-09 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-10 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-11 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2022-12 Demand Post-COVID recovery led to uptick in polyether polyol demand as global construction and automotive sectors rebounded. S&P Global Commodity Insights
2023-01 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-02 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-03 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-04 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-05 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-06 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-07 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-08 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-09 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-10 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-11 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2023-12 Capacity Dow Chemicals completed a 250,000 metric ton/year expansion of its propylene oxide-polyether polyol complex in Freeport, Texas. Market Reports World
2024-01 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-02 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-03 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-04 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-05 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-06 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-07 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-08 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-09 Capacity MCNS expanded its polyol production plant in Ulsan, South Korea, increasing annual capacity by 150,000 metric tons to support regional insulation panel production. Market Reports World
2024-10 Capacity Dow permanently shut its Argentina polyols plant amid global oversupply. Mordor Intelligence
2024-11 Capacity Dow permanently shut its Argentina polyols plant amid global oversupply. Mordor Intelligence
2024-12 Capacity Dow permanently shut its Argentina polyols plant amid global oversupply. Mordor Intelligence
2025-01 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-02 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-03 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-04 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-05 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-06 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-07 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-08 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-09 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-10 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-11 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2025-12 Capacity Dow disclosed plans to close its 94 ktpa polyether polyols facility in Tertre, Belgium, by March 2026, citing sustained high European energy costs. Mordor Intelligence
2026-01 Demand North America Polyol Price Index fell by 12.4% quarter-over-quarter, reflecting softer downstream demand conditions. ChemAnalyst
2026-02 Demand North America Polyol Price Index fell by 12.4% quarter-over-quarter, reflecting softer downstream demand conditions. ChemAnalyst
2026-03 Feedstock China's polyether polyol market experienced surge driven by soaring propylene oxide costs and supply uncertainty. Achilles Chem
2026-04 Feedstock China's polyether polyol market experienced surge driven by soaring propylene oxide costs and supply uncertainty. Achilles Chem
2026-05 Feedstock China's polyether polyol market experienced surge driven by soaring propylene oxide costs and supply uncertainty. Achilles Chem

Polyether polyol is a class of oligomeric or polymeric compounds characterized by a polyether backbone (repeating ether linkages, –C–O–C–) and multiple terminal hydroxyl (–OH) groups. They are produced primarily by the ring-opening polymerization of cyclic ethers—most commonly propylene oxide (PO) and/or ethylene oxide (EO)—onto a low-molecular-weight initiator (starter) molecule such as glycerol, sorbitol, sucrose, or propylene glycol, using an alkaline (KOH) or double-metal cyanide (DMC) catalyst. The resulting polyols range from low-viscosity liquids to waxy solids depending on molecular weight, functionality, and EO/PO ratio. They are the principal reactive component in polyurethane systems, reacting with isocyanates to form flexible foams, rigid foams, elastomers, coatings, adhesives, and sealants. Key commercial parameters include hydroxyl number (OH number), molecular weight, functionality, viscosity, and water content.

Top Countries Production Capacity

Average Polyether Polyol Capacity by Country/Region in 2025 (ktpa)
Rank Country / Region Average Daily Production (ktpa)
Global Total12000
1 China 9000
2 Europe 2400
3 United States 1050
4 South Korea 740
5 India 400
6 Japan 300

Production Process of Polyether Polyol

Polyether polyol is a class of oligomeric or polymeric compounds characterized by a polyether backbone (repeating ether linkages, –C–O–C–) and multiple terminal hydroxyl (–OH) groups. They are produced primarily by the ring-opening polymerization of cyclic ethers—most commonly propylene oxide (PO) and/or ethylene oxide (EO)—onto a low-molecular-weight initiator (starter) molecule such as glycerol, sorbitol, sucrose, or propylene glycol, using an alkaline (KOH) or double-metal cyanide (DMC) catalyst. The resulting polyols range from low-viscosity liquids to waxy solids depending on molecular weight, functionality, and EO/PO ratio. They are the principal reactive component in polyurethane systems, reacting with isocyanates to form flexible foams, rigid foams, elastomers, coatings, adhesives, and sealants. Key commercial parameters include hydroxyl number (OH number), molecular weight, functionality, viscosity, and water content.

Specs & Grades

PropertyTypical Value / RangeUnitRepresentative Grade / Application
Hydroxyl Number (OH No.)20–60mg KOH/gFlexible slabstock foam polyol
Hydroxyl Number (OH No.)250–550mg KOH/gRigid foam polyol
Hydroxyl Number (OH No.)28–56mg KOH/gMolded flexible foam / CASE polyol
Nominal Molecular Weight400–700g/molRigid foam (high OH No.)
Nominal Molecular Weight3,000–6,000g/molFlexible foam (low OH No.)
Nominal Molecular Weight1,000–3,000g/molCASE (coatings, adhesives, sealants, elastomers)
Functionality (f)2–3Flexible foam / CASE
Functionality (f)3–8Rigid foam
Viscosity (25 °C)200–1,000mPa·sFlexible foam polyol
Viscosity (25 °C)1,000–10,000mPa·sRigid foam polyol
Water Content<0.05wt%General specification
Acid Value<0.05mg KOH/gGeneral specification
Unsaturation (monol content)<0.010 (KOH) / <0.003 (DMC)meq/gConventional KOH vs. DMC-catalyzed
EO content (tipped polyols)10–20wt%EO-tipped flexible foam polyol (enhanced reactivity)
Color (APHA)<50APHAGeneral specification

Who are the Top Players?

CompanyHeadquartersKey Facilities
Dow ChemicalMidland, Michigan, USAFreeport TX, Map Ta Phut, Thailand, Sadara, Saudi Arabia, Baytown TX, Deerfield MA, New Martinsville WV, South Charleston WV, Channelview TX, New Marts ville WV, Tarragona, Spain
BASFLudwigshafen, GermanyGeismar LA, USA, Wyandotte MI, USA, Freeport TX, USA, Ludwigshafen Germany, Antwerp Belgium, Kuantan Malaysia, Nanjing China, Zhanjiang China
CovestroLeverkusen, GermanyDormagen Germany, Baytown TX, USA, Deerfield MA, USA, New Martinsville WV, USA, South Charleston WV, USA, Channelview TX, USA, New Martinsville WV, USA
Shell ChemicalsLondon, UKGeismar LA, USA, Deer Park TX, USA, Moerdijk Netherlands, Pernis Netherlands, Stanlow UK, Scotford Canada, Jurong Island Singapore, Klang Malaysia
HuntsmanThe Woodlands, Texas, USAHouston TX, USA, Kuan Yin Taiwan
Wanhua Chemical GroupYantai, Shandong, ChinaYantai Shandong, Ningbo China, Foshan China
Our Analysis are Happy

"Global volatility doesn't have to be a risk for your business. We monitor feedstock shifts and geopolitical trends daily to help you anticipate price movements before they hit the market."

Theo James

"Data is only as good as its source. We go beyond the numbers to ensure that the product grade you select matches your specific application, reducing waste and optimizing your operational efficiency."

Emilia Munro

"Timing is everything in petrochemical procurement. Our goal is to align your purchasing cycles with market troughs, effectively lowering your cost basis and maximizing your margins."

Branden Griffiths

we’re here to all your questions

Everything you need to know about our market analysis, product quality, and procurement process.

Costs vary based on the scope. Please contact our sales team for a custom quote.

Yes, we offer flexible payment terms and volume-based pricing for corporate accounts.

Yes, every delivery includes a Certificate of Analysis (COA) and safety documentation (MSDS).

Certainly. Our technical experts are available to guide you to the ideal grade for your specific application.

Ready to speak
with a analyst?

Contact Us

We're always here to help. If you have any questions or concerns, please don't hesitate to reach out to us.


Email:

sales@pmarketresearch.com

error: Content is protected !!