HCB Magazine November 2020

Page 3

UP FRONT  01

EDITOR’S LETTER

The idea of ‘collaboration’ has a chequered history. During World

That collaboration extends up and down the supply

War II, collaboration was a by-word for ‘sleeping with the enemy’

chain too. Petrochemical manufacturers want to show

(at least metaphorically), and ‘Vichy’ and ‘Quisling’ became

themselves to be part of the solution, not the problem,

synonymous with national treachery.

and in order to be able to give the figures needed to support

In the business world, too, ‘collaboration’ was a concept only

that claim, they will need their logistics partners to be on

whispered, raising as it did ideas of anti-competitive behaviour,

the same track. Indeed, in a number of examples provided

the sort of thing that would bring down the wrath of anti-trust

in this issue of HCB, there are very specific illustrations

authorities. More than once I was warned off using the word by

of the new way of companies helping each other to achieve

trade associations wary of overstepping the mark, alert to the

the decarbonisation targets being set. In passing, one

fact that some senior executives had spent time in prison and

may wonder why some shippers are still using flexitanks,

companies heavily fined for breaches of standards.

a single-use plastics bag that presents significant

So it has been quite a change to see the word ‘collaboration’

disposal issues.

bandied about freely during recent conference discussions. Those

Another salient finding from the debate about achieving

same senior executives now have no compunction in promoting

a net-zero future has been the role of digitisation in providing

the idea of working together along the supply chain and across

the level of transparency needed to figure out exactly how

industry horizontals, despite the fact that market capitalism

each company’s emissions performance is progressing.

(at least on the face of it) shuns the very idea.

That transparency can also directly feed into emissions

Why the change in attitude? The answer is not hard to find. The petrochemical industry, as with its upstream cousin in the

reduction by improving asset utilisation and reducing waste in the logistics function.

oil refining sector, is faced with navigating an immense transition.

And industry is being pressed to make the transformation

The UN, the EU and national governments around the world are

at a time when operations are uncertain due to the Covid-19

foisting upon industry aggressive targets for decarbonisation,

crisis and, as many now expect, a deep and long economic

which for a hydrocarbon-based sector are raising serious

recession to follow.

questions about how those targets are to be met. During last month’s virtual EPCA Annual Meeting, CEO after

However it pans out, EPCA was probably right to ask its speakers to discuss how industry – and the world at large –

CEO talked about the need for industry to work together to find

can re-emerge into a post-pandemic environment that is

the solutions that will be needed to achieve the level of carbon

smarter, more resilient and more sustainable than the ‘old

reduction required. And not just work within the industry but to

normal’ that came before. The petrochemical industry has the

work with regulators to establish the sorts of regulatory and policy

tools and the experience to help make that future a reality.

frameworks that will enable them to focus on the path forward.

Peter Mackay

WWW.HCBLIVE.COM


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