$613B Market — The U.S. Chemical Industry Powers American Manufacturing
The United States chemical industry generates approximately $613 billion in annual shipments as of 2025, representing approximately 25% of all US manufacturing output and making the US the world's second-largest chemical producer after China. The American Chemistry Council estimates the industry's total economic contribution — including direct output, supplier-chain activity, and employee spending — at approximately $2.4 trillion annually, equivalent to approximately 10% of US GDP.
The industry's multiplier effect is extraordinary because chemistry is foundational to virtually all other manufacturing. Approximately 96% of all manufactured goods depend on chemical inputs at some stage — from the polymers in car bumpers to the adhesives in smartphones to the fertilisers that grow food. This makes chemical industry health a leading indicator for the broader manufacturing economy, and chemical demand one of the most reliable early signals of industrial cycles.
The sector directly employs approximately 520,000 Americans earning an average of approximately $88,000 annually — nearly 50% above the average US manufacturing wage of $58,000. These high-wage jobs are heavily concentrated in Texas, Louisiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Tennessee, forming critical economic pillars in regions where comparable-wage alternatives are limited. The industry's competitive fortunes are deeply tied to feedstock costs — directly connected to the US fossil fuel consumption statistics that underpin American industrial competitiveness.
The US chemical sector's global strength rests on a unique combination of structural advantages operating simultaneously: the world's cheapest ethane feedstock from shale gas (approximately $0.20-0.30/MMBtu versus $6-10/MMBtu for naphtha-based competitors); the world's deepest capital markets enabling massive plant-scale investments; a world-class university system producing more chemical engineers than any other nation; and a domestic market of 335 million high-income consumers providing the scale to justify producing the full chemical product range without export dependency.
These structural advantages have made the US the preferred destination for global chemical investment, with approximately $300 billion deployed in new capacity since 2010 — the largest sustained chemical investment wave in American history. Despite China's dominance by volume, the US retains the highest-value-added positions in specialty, pharmaceutical, and advanced materials chemistry, as detailed in our analysis of the worldwide chemical industry.
The Shale Gas Revolution — $300B Investment, World's Cheapest Ethylene
The shale gas revolution is the most consequential structural shift in the US chemical industry since the post-WWII petrochemical buildout. Beginning around 2008-2010, hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling unlocked enormous quantities of natural gas — and crucially, ethane — from shale formations across Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Texas, and Louisiana, driving US gas prices from $8-10/MMBtu to below $2-3/MMBtu.
The impact on chemical economics was transformative. US ethane-based ethylene production costs fell to approximately $150-250 per tonne — versus $600-900 per tonne for European and Asian naphtha-based producers. This 50-70% cost advantage was not marginal — it was a structural realignment that made the Gulf Coast the world's lowest-cost location for polyethylene, ethylene oxide, and dozens of derivative chemicals. The relationship between US energy costs and chemical competitiveness shapes how US equity markets value chemical companies with Gulf Coast ethylene exposure.
The investment response was historic. Since 2010, the American Chemistry Council has tracked approximately $300 billion in US chemical industry investments — primarily Texas and Louisiana — representing the largest peacetime industrial capital deployment in American history. This wave included 30+ world-scale ethylene crackers (each costing $2-4B), massive polyethylene and polypropylene expansions, several large methanol plants, and hundreds of downstream specialty chemical facilities.
The results are dramatic: US ethylene production capacity grew from approximately 28 million tonnes (2010) to 45 million tonnes (2025) — a 60% expansion in 15 years. US polyethylene exports grew from ~5 million to ~15+ million tonnes annually, making the US the world's largest polyethylene exporter. The Appalachian and Permian Basin plays are expected to continue providing abundant low-cost ethane through at least 2030. For broader context, see our analysis of stock market valuation and how feedstock cost dynamics influence chemical sector multiples.
US Chemical Industry Investment — $300B Since 2010 by Category ($B)
The navy bar chart below shows the cumulative investment in US chemical capacity since 2010, broken down by project category. The dominant role of ethylene and polyethylene capacity — the direct beneficiaries of cheap shale ethane — is immediately visible, followed by methanol, propylene derivatives, and specialty chemical expansions.
Gulf Coast Dominance — 45% of US Output, World's Largest Petrochemical Complex
The Gulf Coast chemical complex — stretching from Corpus Christi and the Houston Ship Channel in Texas through Lake Charles, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans in Louisiana — is the world's largest integrated petrochemical region, accounting for approximately 45% of total US chemical output and approximately $200-250 billion in annual production.
The region's dominance is rooted in a century of accumulated infrastructure. The first Gulf Coast petrochemical plants were built in the 1930s-1940s to process crude oil and gas from East Texas and Louisiana fields. Over eight decades, the accumulation of pipelines, marine terminals, refineries, storage facilities, rail connections, and a dense ecosystem of engineering firms and contractors has created a self-reinforcing agglomeration that no competitor can replicate from scratch.
The Houston Ship Channel alone — a 52-mile industrial waterway — is lined with 500+ facilities producing polyethylene, ethylene oxide, styrene, vinyl chloride, benzene, propylene, methanol, and hundreds of specialty chemicals. It handles approximately 200 million tonnes of cargo annually, generating an estimated $50 billion in direct output. The Texas-Louisiana pipeline grid carries hundreds of millions of tonnes of chemical intermediates between plants annually — a physical network whose replacement value runs into the hundreds of billions.
A new chemical plant on the Gulf Coast can source 10 different feedstocks from neighbouring facilities via pipeline, share utility costs, access the world's deepest pool of experienced process operators, and export through multiple deepwater ports. These advantages are impossible to replicate elsewhere. The Gulf Coast's role as both a manufacturing powerhouse and export hub makes it one of the most strategically important industrial regions in the world's largest economy.
Beyond the Gulf Coast, the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes region — Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, and parts of Pennsylvania — is home to a major specialty chemicals, coatings, adhesives, and polymers cluster historically built around the automotive and steel industries. Companies including Sherwin-Williams (Cleveland), Ashland Global Holdings, and Quaker Houghton anchor this cluster, supplying industrial coatings, metalworking fluids, water treatment chemicals, and specialty polymers to North American manufacturers.
The Delaware Valley and Mid-Atlantic region (New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland) was historically the US pharmaceutical and fine chemical heartland — anchored by DuPont (Wilmington) and Rohm and Haas (Philadelphia, now part of Dow). It retains significant pharma manufacturing and specialty chemical activity. The Pacific Coast and Mountain West has emerged as a critical hub for electronic chemicals — Cabot Microelectronics, Entegris, and US operations of Shin-Etsu and JSR produce ultra-pure process chemicals for semiconductor fab clusters in Oregon, Arizona, and the San Francisco Bay Area.
US Chemical Output by State — Top 10 Producing States (2025, $B)
The white animated horizontal bars below rank the top 10 US states by chemical industry output. Texas's extraordinary dominance — driven by Gulf Coast petrochemicals and the Houston-area speciality chemical cluster — is immediately apparent, followed by Louisiana, Ohio, and California, which each represent distinct chemical industry strengths.
Largest US Chemical Companies — Dow, LyondellBasell, ExxonMobil & More
Dow Inc., headquartered in Midland, Michigan — the same city where Herbert Dow founded the company in 1897 — is the US's largest pure-play chemical company at approximately $45 billion in annual revenue and approximately 35,900 employees. Dow operates three divisions: Performance Materials and Coatings (silicones, coatings, monomers), Industrial Intermediates and Infrastructure (polyurethanes, ethylene oxide derivatives), and Packaging and Specialty Plastics (polyethylene, polypropylene). Its most critical competitive position is in polyethylene — particularly LLDPE and HDPE — where multiple Gulf Coast crackers benefit directly from the shale ethane advantage.
Dow has invested approximately $10 billion in Gulf Coast expansion since 2010, making it one of the largest beneficiaries of the shale transformation. The company's stock performance is closely tracked as a bellwether for the broader US chemical sector in US industrial investment analysis, given its exposure to global commodity chemical pricing and feedstock dynamics.
LyondellBasell (Houston, ~$38B) is the world's largest polypropylene and polyethylene producer, with multiple Gulf Coast crackers and a large Houston refinery. ExxonMobil Chemical (~$35B) contributes basic petrochemicals, polyethylene, and performance polymers from its Baytown, Texas operations — benefiting from deep refinery-chemical integration. Linde plc (Danbury, CT, ~$33B) operates the world's largest industrial gas business, supplying hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, argon, and specialty gases that are critical enablers of US chemical manufacturing at every level of the value chain.
The performance of these major chemical companies directly influences the composition and returns of US financial markets, where chemical stocks form a significant portion of the S&P 500 industrials and materials indices.
Top US Chemical Companies by Revenue — 2024 Rankings
The white rank bars below compare the top 10 US chemical companies by annual revenue. Dow's $45B lead over the pack reflects its breadth as a pure-play diversified chemical major, while the rankings also highlight the industrial gas giants (Linde, Air Products) and specialty leaders (PPG, Eastman, Celanese) that give the US chemical industry its distinctive profile.
US Chemical Market Segments — Basic 52%, Specialty 28%, Pharma 12%, Agro 8%
Basic and commodity chemicals represent the largest segment at approximately 52% of US chemical output (~$319B) — encompassing petrochemicals (ethylene, propylene, benzene, butadiene), polymers (polyethylene, polypropylene, PVC), and inorganic chemicals (sulphuric acid, chlorine, ammonia). The shale gas revolution has dramatically reinforced US competitiveness here, making this segment the primary driver of the $300B investment wave since 2010.
Specialty chemicals account for approximately 28% (~$172B) and are the highest-margin, fastest-growing segment. US specialty leadership spans adhesives (Henkel, HB Fuller), coatings (Sherwin-Williams, PPG, Axalta), industrial gases (Linde, Air Products), electronic chemicals (Entegris, Cabot Microelectronics), and water treatment (Ecolab). The electronic chemicals sub-segment is growing at approximately 8-10% annually as CHIPS Act fab construction creates sustained demand for ultra-pure process chemicals. This connection between AI infrastructure and chemical demand is explored in our analysis of the worldwide AI market.
Pharmaceutical chemicals — APIs, drug delivery polymers, and pharmaceutical excipients — contribute approximately 12% (~$74B). Despite the US being the world's largest pharma market, much API manufacturing has historically been offshore (India, China). A post-COVID reshoring push is now directing billions into domestic pharmaceutical chemical capacity through BARDA and DoD strategic reserve programmes.
Agrochemicals account for approximately 8% (~$49B). Corteva, FMC Corporation, and AMVAC Chemical hold significant global positions in crop protection chemistry. The growing use of data-driven precision agriculture — AI and sensor technology optimising agrochemical application — is creating new premium-priced demand for microencapsulated and controlled-release formulations.
US Chemical Industry by Segment — 2025 Market Mix
The navy donut chart below shows the composition of US chemical industry output across its four major segments. The relatively high specialty chemicals and pharma shares — compared to global averages — reflect the US industry's emphasis on high-value-added chemistry rather than the commodity volume production that defines China's chemical sector.
US Chemical Industry Output — Historical Growth 2005 to 2026 ($B)
The white line chart below tracks US chemical industry output from 2005 through 2026, showing the pre-shale plateau, the post-2010 shale-driven growth acceleration, the COVID-19 disruption (2020), and the strong post-pandemic recovery. The 2025-2026 trajectory is toward the $620-640B range as new capacity commissioned through 2023 reaches full utilisation.
US Chemical Exports vs Imports — Trade Balance 2015–2025 ($B)
The white grouped bar chart below compares US chemical exports and imports over the past decade, illustrating the consistent trade surplus that makes chemicals one of America's few manufacturing sectors with a positive trade balance. Note the surge in exports post-2015 as new Gulf Coast polyethylene and methanol capacity came online and began exporting to global markets.
US Chemical Industry — Full Data Table by Segment and State
The sortable table below provides comprehensive data on the US chemical industry across major segments and key producing states, including output values, employment, average wages, year-over-year growth, and the key companies anchoring each category. Click any column header to sort the data and explore the industry's structure in detail.
| Category | Output | Share | Employment | Avg. Wage | YoY Growth |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic Petrochemicals | $185B | 30% | ~82K | $95K avg | +3.2% |
| Polymers & Plastics | $134B | 22% | ~75K | $82K avg | +2.8% |
| Specialty Chemicals | $172B | 28% | ~165K | $98K avg | +5.4% |
| Pharmaceutical Chem. | $74B | 12% | ~95K | $112K avg | +4.8% |
| Agrochemicals | $49B | 8% | ~38K | $88K avg | +2.1% |
| Industrial Gases | $45B | 7% | ~52K | $95K avg | +4.2% |
| Electronic Chemicals | $28B | 4.6% | ~22K | $128K avg | +9.1% |
| Texas (Gulf Coast) | $175B | 28.6% | ~110K | $95K avg | +3.5% |
| Louisiana | $62B | 10% | ~40K | $88K avg | +2.8% |
| Ohio | $38B | 6.2% | ~35K | $82K avg | +2.1% |
| California | $32B | 5.2% | ~28K | $115K avg | +6.2% |
| Pennsylvania | $28B | 4.6% | ~25K | $92K avg | +3.1% |
The Houston Ship Channel is the world's most concentrated chemical manufacturing corridor — a 52-mile industrial waterway lined with more than 500 chemical plants, refineries, and industrial facilities producing approximately $50 billion in chemical products annually. A ship entering the channel from the Gulf of Mexico passes polyethylene plants (Dow, ExxonMobil), styrene producers, vinyl chloride manufacturers, benzene storage terminals, ethylene oxide plants, ammonia loading facilities, and hundreds of specialty chemical operations — all connected by an underground pipeline network that makes the entire complex function as a single, vast integrated chemical machine. The channel handles approximately 200 million tonnes of cargo annually — more than any other US port — making it America's most economically productive stretch of water. A complete inventory of the channel's chemical production capabilities would constitute a near-complete list of the world's most important industrial chemicals. The channel's infrastructure took more than a century to build and cannot be replicated anywhere on Earth at any price — it is the ultimate expression of the path-dependent agglomeration economics that make the Gulf Coast permanently the world's chemical manufacturing heartland.
U.S. Chemical Industry — Key Statistics at a Glance
US Chemical Industry Forecast 2028 — $680-720B, Electronic Chemicals Boom, Green Wave
The US chemical industry is projected to grow from approximately $613 billion (2025) to approximately $680-720 billion by 2028 at a CAGR of approximately 3.5-4.5%. The primary driver will be electronic chemicals and semiconductor materials — 50+ new US semiconductor facilities announced since the CHIPS Act collectively represent approximately $400 billion in fab construction, each requiring hundreds of tonnes of ultra-pure process chemicals annually. Companies including Entegris, Merck KGaA, Shin-Etsu, and JSR are investing billions in new US electronic chemicals capacity, driving this segment to approximately $40-50 billion by 2028.
Battery materials are the second-fastest growth segment, expanding at approximately 15% annually as US EV production scales under the Inflation Reduction Act's domestic content requirements. The IRA's $7,500 EV consumer tax credit requires increasing North American-sourced battery materials — directly incentivising investment in cathode materials, anode materials, electrolytes, and separator coatings within the US. Major investments are underway from Albemarle, Livent, and multiple new cathode active material plants.
Green hydrogen chemistry is the third major growth vector. The IRA's Production Tax Credit of $3/kg for clean hydrogen — the world's most generous hydrogen incentive — has already triggered 100+ green hydrogen project announcements totalling 50+ GW of proposed electrolyser capacity. The chemical industry is the world's largest hydrogen consumer (ammonia, refining), meaning successful green hydrogen development decarbonises major portions of chemical manufacturing while creating new demand for electrolyser catalysts and proton exchange membranes.
The Gulf Coast shale feedstock advantage is expected to persist through at least 2030, supporting continued US competitiveness in basic petrochemicals. The intersection of energy transition investment, digital economy growth, and chemical industry capital spending is explored in our coverage of digital economy trends and platform economy research.
Frequently Asked Questions — U.S. Chemical Industry
The US chemical industry generates approximately $613 billion in annual shipments as of 2025, making it the world's second-largest national chemical industry after China ($2.4 trillion) and slightly ahead of the EU combined ($770 billion). The industry contributes approximately 25% of US manufacturing output and generates approximately $130 billion in annual exports. The American Chemistry Council estimates the chemical industry's total economic contribution — including direct, indirect, and induced effects — at approximately $2.4 trillion, equivalent to approximately 10% of US GDP. Since 2010, the industry has invested approximately $300 billion in new and expanded capacity, driven by the shale gas revolution that gave US chemical producers access to the world's cheapest ethane feedstock at approximately $0.20-0.30/MMBtu versus $6-10 for competitors' naphtha-based feedstocks.
The United States' biggest competitive advantage is extraordinarily cheap and abundant ethane feedstock from shale gas. The shale revolution made the US Gulf Coast the world's lowest-cost ethylene producer by approximately 2015, with production costs approximately 50-70% below European and Asian naphtha-based competitors. This cost advantage triggered approximately $300 billion in new chemical investment since 2010 — including 30+ new world-scale ethylene crackers along the Gulf Coast — and has made the US the world's largest polyethylene exporter. Additional advantages include the deepest capital markets for chemical investment financing, world-class research universities producing chemical talent, strong IP protection incentivising innovation, and the Gulf Coast's unique accumulated infrastructure of pipelines, ports, and integrated plant networks.
The largest US chemical companies by revenue: Dow Inc. (Midland, MI, ~$45B, polyethylene and specialty), LyondellBasell (Houston, ~$38B, plastics and refining), ExxonMobil Chemical (Irving, TX, ~$35B, integrated petrochemicals), Linde (Danbury, CT, ~$33B, industrial gases), PPG Industries (Pittsburgh, ~$18B, coatings and specialty), Air Products (Allentown, ~$12B, industrial gases), Celanese (Irving, TX, ~$11B, specialty chemicals), Eastman Chemical (Kingsport, TN, ~$9B, specialty), Huntsman Corporation (Woodlands, TX, ~$6B, polyurethanes), Cabot Corporation (Boston, ~$4B, specialty chemicals). ExxonMobil Chemical and LyondellBasell are the world's largest polyethylene producers by volume.
US chemical manufacturing is most heavily concentrated along the Gulf Coast — Texas and Louisiana — which accounts for approximately 45% of total US chemical output. Texas alone ($175B output) hosts the Houston Ship Channel — the world's largest petrochemical complex — and accounts for approximately 28.6% of national chemical production. Louisiana ($62B) follows as the second-largest state. The Ohio Valley and Great Lakes region is the second-largest cluster for specialty chemicals, coatings, and polymers serving the automotive and manufacturing sectors. The Delaware Valley hosts significant pharmaceutical chemistry. The Pacific Coast and Mountain West (California, Arizona, Oregon) is the fastest-growing cluster for electronic chemicals driven by proximity to semiconductor fabs. The top 5 states (Texas, Louisiana, Ohio, California, Pennsylvania) account for approximately 55-60% of all US chemical output.
The US chemical industry directly employs approximately 520,000 people in manufacturing, R&D, engineering, and related functions. The ACC estimates total employment supported — including indirect supply chain and induced consumer-spending effects — at approximately 5 million jobs. Chemical industry wages average approximately $88,000 annually — nearly 50% above the average US manufacturing wage of $58,000 — reflecting the advanced technical skills, chemical engineering expertise, and safety training required. Chemical engineers, process engineers, industrial chemists, safety professionals, and quality control specialists are among the most in-demand occupational categories. Texas and Louisiana together account for approximately 150,000 direct chemical manufacturing jobs.
Electronic chemicals is the fastest-growing US chemical segment at approximately 9.1% annually, driven by the CHIPS Act semiconductor fab construction wave and exploding demand for AI chip manufacturing. The CHIPS Act's $52 billion allocation has triggered $400+ billion in private semiconductor fab investments across the US, each requiring hundreds of ultra-pure process chemicals (photoresists, CMP slurries, specialty solvents, etching gases) once operational. Battery materials is the second-fastest growing at approximately 15% annually — driven by IRA domestic content requirements for EV batteries that are pulling cathode, anode, electrolyte, and separator chemical production into the US. Specialty chemicals broadly are growing at 5-6% CAGR — roughly 2× the rate of commodity chemicals (2.5-3% CAGR).
The US chemical industry exports approximately $130-140 billion annually, making chemicals one of the country's largest manufacturing export categories and generating a trade surplus of approximately $28 billion. Major chemical export categories include organic chemicals ($35B), pharmaceutical preparations ($28B), plastics and resins ($22B), agricultural chemicals ($12B), and specialty chemicals ($15B). The top export destinations are Canada ($28B), Mexico ($18B), China ($10B), Brazil ($8B), and Germany ($7B). US polyethylene exports alone have grown from approximately 5 million tonnes in 2010 to approximately 15+ million tonnes by 2025 — making the US the world's largest polyethylene exporter — a direct result of the shale gas-driven Gulf Coast capacity expansion. The chemical trade surplus consistently helps offset the US overall goods trade deficit.
The shale gas revolution has been the most transformative event in US chemical history since the post-WWII petrochemical buildout. It drove US ethane prices from approximately $0.70/MMBtu (pre-shale) to $0.20-0.30/MMBtu — roughly 3-5× cheaper than European and Asian naphtha feedstocks. This triggered approximately $300 billion in Gulf Coast investment since 2010, including 30+ new world-scale ethylene crackers that collectively added approximately 17 million tonnes of annual ethylene capacity. US polyethylene production capacity more than doubled. US ethylene production costs fell from approximately $600-700/tonne (pre-shale, naphtha equivalent) to approximately $150-250/tonne — making US producers globally competitive in every market. The US became the world's largest LNG exporter in 2023, the world's largest polyethylene exporter, and a major methanol exporter — all consequences of the shale transformation.
The Gulf Coast chemical complex — stretching from Corpus Christi, Texas through the Houston Ship Channel corridor to Lake Charles, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans in Louisiana — is the world's largest integrated petrochemical manufacturing region. It accounts for approximately 45% of total US chemical output and approximately $200-250 billion in annual chemical production. The Houston Ship Channel alone handles 200 million tonnes of cargo annually and is lined with 500+ chemical plants. The region is served by the world's most extensive petrochemical pipeline network, connecting crackers to derivative plants, refineries to chemical complexes, and storage facilities to deep-water export terminals. The Gulf Coast's infrastructure took a century to build and cannot be replicated — it represents the ultimate agglomeration advantage in global chemical manufacturing. Texas alone contributes approximately $175 billion in chemical output, making it the world's fourth-largest chemical producer if measured as an independent economy.
China's chemical industry at approximately $2.4 trillion is approximately 4× the US figure of $613 billion, and China produces approximately 43% of global chemical output versus the US's 11%. China's dominance is in commodity volume — basic petrochemicals, polymers, and commodity intermediates where scale and integrated chemical parks create cost advantages. However, the US retains important competitive positions: world's lowest-cost ethylene production from shale ethane, dominant positions in specialty chemicals and pharmaceutical ingredients where innovation and IP matter more than volume, the deepest capital markets for chemical investment, and the strongest positions in electronic chemicals and advanced battery materials — the fastest-growing chemical segments globally. The US also controls critical chokepoints in chemical supply chains for AI chips and next-generation semiconductors. For a full global comparison, see our analysis of the European chemical market and German chemical leadership.
Key US chemical regulations include: TSCA (Toxic Substances Control Act), administered by the EPA — significantly strengthened by the 2016 Lautenberg Act giving EPA authority to evaluate and restrict existing chemicals, now covering approximately 87,000 existing chemical substances in US commerce. Clean Air Act — regulates chemical plant emissions through NESHAP and NSPS standards; chemical plants are major regulated sources under Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) standards. OSHA Process Safety Management (PSM) — governs safe handling of highly hazardous chemicals at approximately 12,500 facilities nationwide. RCRA (Resource Conservation and Recovery Act) — regulates generation, storage, transport, and disposal of hazardous chemical waste. EPCRA/SARA Title III — requires chemical release reporting and emergency planning. The Inflation Reduction Act (2022) adds methane emissions fees and clean hydrogen production incentives that directly affect chemical sector compliance costs and investment decisions.
The US chemical industry is projected to grow from approximately $613 billion (2025) to approximately $680-720 billion by 2028 at 3.5-4.5% CAGR. Key growth drivers: Electronic chemicals (9%+ annually, CHIPS Act semiconductor fab demand), battery materials (15% annually, IRA EV domestic content requirements), green hydrogen chemistry ($3/kg PTC triggering 50+ GW electrolyser investment), and continued speciality chemical growth (5-6%). The Gulf Coast shale feedstock advantage is expected to continue through at least 2030. Primary risks include Chinese commodity chemical overcapacity depressing global prices, rising domestic gas demand from LNG exports potentially tightening ethane supply, and tightening environmental regulations increasing compliance costs. The US is well-positioned to be the world's leading supplier of AI-enabling electronic chemicals and clean energy battery materials through 2028 and beyond.
Primary: American Chemistry Council — Guide to the Business of Chemistry 2025
Primary: US Census Bureau — Annual Survey of Manufactures, Chemical Manufacturing Sector
Primary: Bureau of Economic Analysis — GDP by Industry, Chemical Manufacturing
Primary: USITC Trade Data Web — US Chemical Products Trade Statistics
BusinessStats: All segment breakdowns, state-level output estimates, company revenue comparisons, investment tracking, trade flow analysis, and 2028 forecast projections are BusinessStats proprietary research combining the above primary government and industry sources with IHS Markit (S&P Global) chemical market intelligence, ACC chemical investment tracker, individual company 10-K SEC filings for FY2024, and Bloomberg chemical sector analyst consensus data.
