GCC petrochemical companies are among the lowest cost manufacturers in the world owing to cheap feedstock and energy costs, Kuwait Financial Centre (Markaz) said in a research note Sunday. Given their strategic location and development as a major transportation hub, GCC petrochemical producers enjoy a huge competitive advantage over others. Over the next few years, GCC countries will strive hard to prove their dominance in the petrochemical sector in an effort to diversify their economies away from oil and gas revenues. Development of large-scale petrochemical complexes will serve the dual purpose of diversification as well as employment generation. Petrochemical projects worth $19 billion are under execution in the GCC. Apart from this, projects with an estimated value of $81 billion are in different stages of planning. Saudi Arabia tops the list with $12 billion of projects under execution and another $41 billion of future projects. Gulf Petrochemicals & Chemicals Association (GPCA) has estimated GCC petrochemical capacity to increase from 77.3 MTPA to 113 MTPA at the end of 2015. Saudi Arabia is expected to see largest capacity addition by volume and UAE will see largest growth in percentage terms. Petrochemical prices saw an uptrend in the first half of 2011 in line with the increase in oil prices. However, prices declined during the second half on concerns of euro zone debt problems spiraling to other regions, which resulted in lower demand. Over the next few months, Markaz expects prices to be under pressure due to concerns on global growth. But on a longer term, since most of the incremental demand growth is coming from emerging economies, however, stable prices and margins are expected. Phasing out of older plants in the developed world and possible sanctions on Iran should augur well for GCC producers. China's increasing self-reliance for petrochemical products is a cause of concern for GCC exporters. Sensing the risk, companies in GCC are establishing joint ventures with Chinese companies to set up integrated plants in China in order to tap local demand. But how credible this strategy is remains open to question. GCC petrochemical industry is grappling with the major problem of natural gas shortage, due to increased domestic consumption in areas like electricity generation and desalination, leading to insufficient allocation of ethane to new plants, the report noted. Anti-dumping charges, levied against the region's producers in key markets such as India and China, could set precedence for action by other countries. Even though India lifted anti-dumping duty on polypropylene imports in December 2011, there is always a risk that it will come back given the strong political lobbying, the report further said. Development of shale gas technologies, although still in a nascent stage, is being keenly watched because of the impact it may have on North American markets – which is the largest consumer of petrochemicals. If economical ways of extracting shale gas are found, US producers' competitive position will increase after taking into account the transportation costs for GCC exports. Markaz noted that GCC petrochemical companies must be ready to face the reality that they might not enjoy privileged access to natural gas at subsidized rates indefinitely. There is a double blow of government increasing feedstock prices for existing allocations and new projects not getting ethane allocation. It said companies should expand their current product portfolio and move into high value added downstream chain, away from basic chemicals. Apart from commanding premium pricing, such downstream products are less exposed to overall market fluctuations. GCC governments should seriously start investing in research and development to gain technical know-how to produce specialty products, Markaz report said, adding that access to homegrown technology is vital for an industry which has global ambitions.