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Styrene

What is Styrene

Styrene (vinyl benzene, CAS 100-42-5) is a colorless to pale-yellow, oily liquid aromatic hydrocarbon with the molecular formula C8H8 (C6H5-CH=CH2). It has a characteristic sweet, pungent odor and is slightly soluble in water but miscible with most organic solvents. Styrene is one of the most important industrial monomers, serving as the primary building block for polystyrene (PS), expandable polystyrene (EPS), acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS), styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR), styrene-acrylonitrile (SAN), and unsaturated polyester resins (UPR). It is produced predominantly by the catalytic dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene, which is itself synthesized by the alkylation of benzene with ethylene. Styrene readily undergoes addition polymerization and must be inhibited (typically with 4-tert-butylcatechol, TBC) during storage and transport to prevent premature polymerization.

Analysts Sentiment

Bullish

44.7%

Neutral

26.5%

Bearish

28.8%

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

What's driving sentiment this week:

Past Week (2026-06-01 to 2026-06-07) — Sentiment: Mixed

Hongwei Chemical’s shutdown of 50-100 kt styrene capacity in East China on 2026-06-03 tightened regional supply and pushed local prices higher.

Soft demand in China capped price recovery despite supply tightness, as shown by flat styrene trades at 8,844 CNY/MT on 2026-06-02, limiting upside momentum across Asia.

Geopolitical disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz on 2026-06-05 sustained elevated crude and benzene feedstock costs, compressing styrene producer margins despite OPEC+ modest quota hikes on 2026-06-07 that provided limited relief.

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

Near-term direction hinges on crude and benzene feedstock price signals following the EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook on 2026-06-09, which could confirm tightening if production ramps.

The EIA report due 2026-06-09 is the key catalyst expected to clarify market balance and margin trajectories.

A delay in Hormuz supply resumption or crude inventory stabilization would reverse bullish momentum and maintain cost pressure on styrene producers.

Key Market Impact

Upstream supply constraints and geopolitical risk are dominating styrene costs and margins, sustaining tightness despite soft Asian demand.

Traders and producers are likely prioritizing feedstock hedging and cautious restocking amid uncertain supply restoration timing.

How About the Price?

Monthly Styrene Price History (USD/ton)
Month Price (USD/ton) Change Change Rate
2026-06-08 1100 40 3.77%
2026-05 1060 30 2.91%
2026-04 1030 30 3%
2026-03 1000 30 3.09%
2026-02 970 30 3.19%
2026-01 940 30 3.3%
2025-12 910 30 3.41%
2025-11 880 30 3.53%
2025-10 850 30 3.66%
2025-09 820 30 3.8%
2025-08 790 30 3.95%
2025-07 760 30 4.11%
2025-06 730 30 4.29%
2025-05 700 30 4.48%
2025-04 670 30 4.69%
2025-03 640 30 4.92%
2025-02 610 30 5.17%
2025-01 580 30 5.45%
2024-12 550 -50 -8.33%
2024-11 600 -50 -7.69%
2024-10 650 -50 -7.14%
2024-09 700 -50 -6.67%
2024-08 750 -50 -6.25%
2024-07 800 -50 -5.88%
2024-06 850 -50 -5.56%
2024-05 900 -50 -5.26%
2024-04 950 -50 -5%
2024-03 1000 -50 -4.76%
2024-02 1050 -50 -4.55%
2024-01 1100 -50 -4.35%
2023-12 1150 -50 -4.17%
2023-11 1200 -50 -4%
2023-10 1250 -50 -3.85%
2023-09 1300 -50 -3.7%
2023-08 1350 -50 -3.57%
2023-07 1400 -50 -3.45%
2023-06 1450 -50 -3.33%
2023-05 1500 -50 -3.23%
2023-04 1550 -50 -3.12%
2023-03 1600 -50 -3.03%
2023-02 1650 -50 -2.94%
2023-01 1700 -50 -2.86%
2022-12 1750 50 2.94%
2022-11 1700 50 3.03%
2022-10 1650 50 3.12%
2022-09 1600 50 3.23%
2022-08 1550 50 3.33%
2022-07 1500 50 3.45%
2022-06 1450 50 3.57%
2022-05 1400 50 3.7%
2022-04 1350 50 3.85%
2022-03 1300 50 4%
2022-02 1250 50 4.17%
2022-01 1200 50 4.35%
2021-12 1150 50 4.55%
2021-11 1100 50 4.76%
2021-10 1050 50 5%
2021-09 1000 50 5.26%
2021-08 950 50 5.56%
2021-07 900 50 5.88%
2021-06 850 50 6.25%
2021-05 800 50 6.67%
2021-04 750 50 7.14%
2021-03 700 50 7.69%
2021-02 650 30 4.84%
2021-01 620 30 5.08%
2020-12 590 -30 -4.84%
2020-11 620 -30 -4.62%
2020-10 650 -50 -7.14%
2020-09 700 -50 -6.67%
2020-08 750 -50 -6.25%
2020-07 800 -50 -5.88%
2020-06 850 -30 -3.41%
2020-05 880 -40 -4.35%
2020-04 920 -60 -6.12%
2020-03 980 -45 -4.39%
2020-02 1025 -25 -2.38%
2020-01 1050 0 0%

Price Trajectory 2020–2026 (Brief Recap)

Phase 1 — Decline (2020): Prices steadily fell from $1050.0/ton in January to $590.0/ton by December 2020, throughout a period with no specific logged influence factors.

Phase 2 — Recovery (2021 to 2022): A steady price increase occurred from $620.0/ton in January 2021 to $1750.0/ton by December 2022, despite no recorded influence factors on the log for these months.

Phase 3 — Decline (2023 to 2024): Prices decreased gradually from $1700.0/ton in January 2023 to $550.0/ton by December 2024, again with no documented influence factors during this timeframe.

Phase 4 — Early Recovery (2025 to mid 2026): Starting January 2025 at $580.0/ton, prices began rising and reached $1100.0/ton by June 2026, with no corresponding influences noted in the events data.

Supply-side factors

  • No supply-side factors recorded in the influence log for the period 2020–2026.

Demand-side factors

  • No demand-side factors recorded in the influence log for the period 2020–2026.

Substitutes & Alternatives

Substitute / AlternativeReplacement Scenario / How It Substitutes
Alpha-methylstyrene (AMS)Can partially replace styrene as a monomer in ABS, SAN, and unsaturated polyester resins to improve heat deflection temperature. Used as a partial co-monomer (typically up to 30–50 mol%) rather than a full drop-in replacement; requires reformulation of polymerization recipes.
Divinylbenzene (DVB)Used as a cross-linking co-monomer in ion-exchange resins and specialty polymer networks where styrene would otherwise be the base monomer. Partial replacement in specific crosslinked polymer applications; not a bulk commodity substitute.
Vinyltoluene (mixed isomers)Substitutes for styrene in unsaturated polyester resins and alkyd coatings where lower volatility and reduced odor are desired. Drop-in capable in many UPR formulations with minor adjustments to cure chemistry; offers lower vapor pressure than styrene.
Methyl methacrylate (MMA)Replaces styrene in transparent polymer applications (e.g., cast sheets, optical components) where superior UV resistance and optical clarity are required. Requires full reformulation; MMA-based PMMA competes directly with PS and SAN in display and glazing markets.
Bio-based styrene (from bio-ethylbenzene or lignocellulosic routes)Drop-in chemical replacement for fossil-derived styrene in all applications; produced via fermentation-derived ethanol dehydration to ethylene followed by conventional alkylation/dehydrogenation, or via direct conversion of lignin-derived phenylpropanoids. Currently at early commercial/demonstration scale; chemically identical so no reformulation needed.
AcrylonitrileIn rubber and latex applications (e.g., nitrile rubber vs. SBR), acrylonitrile-based polymers substitute for styrene-butadiene systems where oil resistance is the primary requirement. Requires a different polymerization system; not a monomer-level drop-in but a functional end-use substitute.
Polypropylene (PP) / Polyethylene (PE)In packaging and disposable consumer goods, PP and PE compete directly with polystyrene (the main downstream of styrene). Substitution occurs at the polymer/end-product level rather than the monomer level; driven by recycling regulations and consumer brand preferences away from PS.
Cyclopentadiene / Dicyclopentadiene (DCPD)Substitutes for styrene as a reactive diluent and co-monomer in unsaturated polyester resins, particularly in marine and construction composites. Partial replacement (typically 10–30%) to reduce styrene emissions; requires adjustment of resin viscosity and cure profiles.

Regulatory Status

RegionRegulation / Policy NameIssuing AuthorityYear (enacted or latest revision)Key Requirement / ThresholdSource
United StatesNational Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) - Group IV Polymers and ResinsEPA2014 (last amended)Emissions limits for styrene as HAP from polystyrene production; review ongoing per 2025 commentshttps://www.epa.gov/stationary-sources-air-pollution/group-iv-polymers-and-resins-national-emission-standards-hazardous; https://www.epa.gov/stationary-sources-air-pollution/national-emission-standards-hazardous-air-pollutants-neshap-8
United StatesPermissible Exposure Limits (PEL) for StyreneOSHA1971 (unchanged)100 ppm 8-hour TWA; STEL 200 ppmhttp://www.osha.gov/chemicaldata/14; https://aethair.io/resources/osha-air-quality-standards-compliance/
United StatesToxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) Risk Evaluation - Styrene PrioritizationEPA2024Selected for prioritization (not yet High-Priority Substance designation); risk evaluation process initiatedhttps://www.epa.gov/newsreleases/epa-begins-five-chemical-risk-evaluations-under-toxic-substances-control-act-starts; https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2024/12/18/2024-29829/initiation-of-prioritization-under-the-toxic-substances-control-act-tsca-notice-of-availability
European UnionRegulation (EC) No 1907/2006 (REACH) - Harmonised Classification and LabellingECHA2007 (updated 2024)GHS: Flam. Liq. 3 (H226), Acute Tox. 4 (H332), Skin Irrit. 2 (H315), Eye Irrit. 2 (H319), STOT RE 1 (H372 hearing), Repr. 2 (H361d), STOT SE 3; no carcinogenicity classificationhttps://echa.europa.eu/substance-information/-/substanceinfo/100.002.592; https://plasticseurope.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Styrene_SAFE_HANDLING_GUIDE_2024_FINAL_24102024_v2.pdf
European UnionREACH Annex XVII RestrictionsECHAongoing (noted 2024)Restricted for tattoo inks and permanent make-up (R75); flammable/pyrophoric restrictions applyhttps://www.carlroth.com/medias/SDB-2641-IE-EN.pdf
ChinaEnvironmental Risk Assessment and Control Standards for Chemical SubstancesMEE2024Framework for risk assessment/control in chemical parks; styrene subject to new pollutants management in industrial parkshttps://enviliance.com/regions/east-asia/cn/report_12794; https://chemical.chemlinked.com/chempedia/china-new-pollutants-treatment
IndiaAnti-Dumping Duty on Styrene Monomer ImportsDGTR (Ministry of Commerce)2018 (rates 3.8%-55.7%; ongoing review)Anti-dumping duties on imports from US, South Korea, Taiwan; specific rates per exporterhttps://www.polyestertime.com/china-raises-antidumping-duty-styrene-monomer-imports-us/; https://styrene.org/styrene-government-regulations-public-policy/
InternationalIMDG Code / ADR Transport ClassificationIMO / UN Model Regulationsongoing (current edition)UN 2055, Class 3, PG III; stabilized styrene monomerhttps://www.chemos.de/import/data/msds/GB_en/100-42-5-A0001746-GB-en.pdf; https://www.chemradar.com/tools/un/detail/2055

Key Influence Events

No influence events available.

Styrene (vinyl benzene, CAS 100-42-5) is a colorless to pale-yellow, oily liquid aromatic hydrocarbon with the molecular formula C8H8 (C6H5-CH=CH2). It has a characteristic sweet, pungent odor and is slightly soluble in water but miscible with most organic solvents. Styrene is one of the most important industrial monomers, serving as the primary building block for polystyrene (PS), expandable polystyrene (EPS), acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS), styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR), styrene-acrylonitrile (SAN), and unsaturated polyester resins (UPR). It is produced predominantly by the catalytic dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene, which is itself synthesized by the alkylation of benzene with ethylene. Styrene readily undergoes addition polymerization and must be inhibited (typically with 4-tert-butylcatechol, TBC) during storage and transport to prevent premature polymerization.

Top Countries Production Capacity

Average Styrene Capacity by Country/Region in 2025 (tonnes/year)
Rank Country / Region Average Daily Production (tonnes/year)
Global Total45000000
1 China 18000000
2 Europe 10000000
3 United States 2500000
4 South Korea 2000000
5 Japan 1500000
6 Saudi Arabia 1200000
7 India 1000000
8 Taiwan 800000
9 Taiwan (excl. above) 600000
10 Singapore 500000
11 Brazil 400000
12 Thailand 400000
13 South Africa 300000
14 Indonesia 300000
15 Malaysia 200000

Production Process of Styrene

Styrene (vinyl benzene, CAS 100-42-5) is a colorless to pale-yellow, oily liquid aromatic hydrocarbon with the molecular formula C8H8 (C6H5-CH=CH2). It has a characteristic sweet, pungent odor and is slightly soluble in water but miscible with most organic solvents. Styrene is one of the most important industrial monomers, serving as the primary building block for polystyrene (PS), expandable polystyrene (EPS), acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS), styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR), styrene-acrylonitrile (SAN), and unsaturated polyester resins (UPR). It is produced predominantly by the catalytic dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene, which is itself synthesized by the alkylation of benzene with ethylene. Styrene readily undergoes addition polymerization and must be inhibited (typically with 4-tert-butylcatechol, TBC) during storage and transport to prevent premature polymerization.

Specs & Grades

PropertyTypical Value / RangeUnitGrade / Standard
Purity (Styrene content)≥ 99.7wt%Polymer Grade
Purity (Styrene content)≥ 99.5wt%Standard Grade
Color (APHA/Hazen)≤ 10APHAPolymer Grade
Color (APHA/Hazen)≤ 20APHAStandard Grade
Ethylbenzene content≤ 0.10wt%Polymer Grade
Ethylbenzene content≤ 0.30wt%Standard Grade
Aldehyde content (as benzaldehyde)≤ 0.010wt%Polymer Grade
Peroxide content (as H2O2)≤ 0.005wt%Polymer Grade
Polymer content≤ 0.005wt%Polymer Grade
Inhibitor (TBC, 4-tert-butylcatechol)10 – 15ppm wtStandard storage grade
Inhibitor (TBC)50 – 100ppm wtLong-haul / export grade
Water content≤ 0.020wt%All grades
Boiling point145.2°C at 1 atmPhysical property
Freezing point-30.6°CPhysical property
Density at 20°C0.906g/cm³Physical property
Flash point (closed cup)31°CSafety property
Refractive index (nD20)1.5469Physical property

Who are the Top Players?

CompanyHeadquartersKey Facilities
INEOS StyrolutionFrankfurt am Main, GermanyPasadena TX, Texas City TX, Bayport TX, Ludwigshafen Germany, Schwarzheide Germany, Cologne Germany, Antwerp Belgium, Wingles France, Ulsan Korea, Yeosu Korea, Map Ta Phut Thailand, Foshan China, Ningbo China, Altamira Mexico
LyondellBasell IndustriesHouston, Texas, USAPasadena TX, Texas City TX, Bayport TX, Channelview TX, Lake Charles LA, Geismar LA, Norco LA, Botlek Rotterdam Netherlands, Moerdijk Netherlands, Fos-sur-Mer France, Ferrara Italy
TotalEnergiesCourbevoie, FranceCarville LA, USA
ShellThe Hague, NetherlandsGeismar LA, USA, Norco LA, USA, Deer Park TX, USA, Sarnia Canada
BASFLudwigshafen, GermanyLudwigshafen Germany
SINOPECBeijing, ChinaAnqing China, Hainan China, Zibo China, Zhoushan China
RepsolMadrid, SpainTarragona Spain, Puertollano Spain, Sines Portugal
Zhejiang PetrochemicalNingbo, ChinaZhoushan China
AlpekMonterrey, MexicoMonaca PA, USA
Westlake ChemicalLake Charles, Louisiana, USALake Charles LA, USA
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