Global Sourcing & Trading

We connect international suppliers and buyers through a reliable global

Wide Product Range

From petroleum products to specialty chemicals, we cover diverse industry needs

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Every product meets international standards to ensure safety and consistency

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Strong logistics ensure your products reach you securely and on schedule

25 Years of Uninterrupted Success

We have a long and proud history given emphasis to environment social and economic outcomes.

Services We Provide

Services We Provide

Basic chemicals

Basic chemicals form the foundation of the global chemical and petrochemical industry. They are large-volume, essential chemical substances that serve as primary raw materials for a wide range of downstream industries, including manufacturing, construction, agriculture, pharmaceuticals, textiles, plastics, detergents, coatings, and water treatment. Unlike specialty or fine chemicals, basic chemicals are characterized by high production volumes, standardized specifications, and broad industrial applications. Their importance lies in their role as building blocks for countless chemical reactions, formulations, and industrial processes across global supply chains. In international trade, basic chemicals are valued for their consistent quality, scalability, and logistical efficiency, making them a critical segment for both domestic consumption and export-oriented markets. Key Products in the Basic Chemicals Category In our product portfolio, the Basic Chemicals category includes the following core materials, each playing a strategic role in industrial production: Caustic Soda (Sodium Hydroxide) Caustic soda is a highly alkaline inorganic chemical widely used in industries such as pulp and paper, alumina refining, soap and detergent manufacturing, textiles, water treatment, and chemical processing. It is valued for its strong reactivity, pH control capability, and effectiveness in neutralization, saponification, and cleaning processes. Caustic soda is commonly supplied in flakes, pearls, or liquid form, depending on application requirements. Ethyl Acetate Ethyl acetate is a volatile organic solvent with a pleasant odor, widely used in paints and coatings, inks, adhesives, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and food processing. Its fast evaporation rate, low toxicity profile, and excellent solvency make it a preferred solvent in industrial and formulation applications. Ethyl acetate is also commonly used as an extraction solvent and as a carrier in specialty chemical blends. n-Hexane (Normal Hexane) n-Hexane is a light aliphatic hydrocarbon solvent primarily used in oil extraction (especially edible oils), polymerization processes, adhesives, coatings, and laboratory applications. It is known for its strong dissolving power for non-polar compounds and its role in industrial separation and purification processes. High-purity grades are essential for consistent performance in sensitive industrial operations. Soda Ash (Sodium Carbonate) Soda ash is a key alkaline chemical used extensively in glass manufacturing, detergents, chemicals, metallurgy, and water softening. It plays a critical role in adjusting alkalinity, acting as a fluxing agent in glass production, and improving cleaning efficiency in detergent formulations. Soda ash is traded globally in dense and light grades, tailored to different industrial needs. Sulfuric Acid Sulfuric acid is one of the most important industrial acids worldwide, often considered a benchmark of industrial capacity. It is essential in fertilizer production, petroleum refining, metal processing, chemical synthesis, battery manufacturing, and wastewater treatment. Due to its strong acidic nature and high reactivity, sulfuric acid is a cornerstone chemical in both basic and advanced industrial processes.

Polymers

Polymers are a broad class of chemical materials composed of long, repeating molecular chains formed by the polymerization of small molecules known as monomers. Due to their versatile physical, chemical, and mechanical properties, polymers represent one of the most important product groups in the global chemical and petrochemical industries. They serve as fundamental raw materials for countless industrial, commercial, and consumer applications worldwide. From lightweight packaging materials to high-performance engineering plastics, polymers are essential to modern manufacturing, infrastructure development, transportation, construction, healthcare, electronics, and agriculture. Their properties can be precisely engineered to achieve specific characteristics such as flexibility, strength, chemical resistance, thermal stability, transparency, or impact resistance. Key Characteristics of Polymers Polymers are valued for their ability to combine performance, durability, and cost efficiency. Key characteristics include: • High strength-to-weight ratio • Excellent chemical and corrosion resistance • Adjustable flexibility and rigidity • Thermal and electrical insulation properties • Ease of processing through extrusion, injection molding, blow molding, and film production • Recyclability and suitability for circular economy applications (depending on polymer type) These advantages make polymers a preferred alternative to traditional materials such as metal, glass, and wood in many industries. Main Categories of Polymer Products The Polymers product group encompasses a wide range of materials, commonly classified based on their chemical structure and application: 1. Polyolefins Polyolefins are the largest and most widely used class of polymers, derived primarily from olefin monomers. • Polyethylene (PE): LDPE, LLDPE, HDPE – used in films, packaging, containers, pipes, and industrial products • Polypropylene (PP): used in automotive parts, packaging, textiles, household goods, and medical applications 2. Vinyl Polymers • Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC): available in different grades (e.g., S65, S70), used in pipes, profiles, cables, flooring, and construction materials • Polystyrene (PS): including GPPS and HIPS, used in packaging, appliances, insulation, and consumer goods 3. Engineering Plastics These polymers offer enhanced mechanical and thermal performance: • Polycarbonate (PC) • Nylon (Polyamide – PA) • ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene) They are commonly used in automotive, electrical, electronics, and industrial components. 4. Specialty and Other Polymers • Polyesters • Polyurethanes (PU) • Elastomers and thermoplastic elastomers (TPE) These materials are designed for specialized applications requiring high flexibility, resilience, or chemical stability. Industrial Applications of Polymers Polymers are indispensable across numerous industries, including: • Packaging (films, containers, stretch and shrink wraps) • Construction (pipes, insulation, profiles, membranes) • Automotive (interior parts, bumpers, fuel systems) • Textiles and fibers • Electrical and electronics • Medical and healthcare products • Agriculture (films, irrigation systems, storage solutions) Commercial Importance Globally, polymers account for hundreds of millions of metric tons of annual production, making them a core segment of international chemical trade. Their demand continues to grow due to population expansion, urbanization, infrastructure development, and advancements in material science. In international markets, polymers are traded in various forms such as granules, pellets, powders, films, and sheets, with standardized grades suitable for export, processing, and downstream manufacturing. Conclusion The Polymers product group forms the backbone of modern industrial materials. By offering unmatched versatility, scalability, and performance, polymers enable innovation across virtually every sector of the global economy. As sustainability, recycling technologies, and advanced polymer formulations evolve, polymers will continue to play a critical role in shaping future industrial and commercial developments.

Resins

Resins are a broad class of polymeric materials that play a fundamental role in modern chemical, petrochemical, and manufacturing industries. They are typically viscous liquids or solid substances that can be transformed into durable, high-performance materials through curing, polymerization, or cross-linking processes. Due to their excellent mechanical strength, chemical resistance, adhesion, and thermal stability, resins are widely used as binders, coatings, structural materials, and intermediates in countless industrial applications. From a commercial and industrial perspective, resins form the backbone of industries such as construction, automotive, marine, electronics, packaging, coatings, adhesives, composites, and advanced engineering materials. Their versatility allows manufacturers to tailor properties such as flexibility, hardness, heat resistance, electrical insulation, and chemical durability to meet specific performance requirements. Classification of Resin Products Resins are generally classified into several major categories based on their chemical structure, curing mechanism, and end-use performance. The most important resin groups in global trade and industrial supply chains include: Thermosetting Resins These resins undergo irreversible chemical reactions during curing, forming rigid and heat-resistant structures. Once cured, they cannot be melted or reshaped. Common thermosetting resins include: • Epoxy Resins • Phenolic Resins • Polyester Resins • Vinyl Ester Resins • Amino Resins (Urea-Formaldehyde, Melamine-Formaldehyde) • Alkyd Resins Thermosetting resins are widely used in coatings, laminates, electrical components, composites, corrosion-resistant structures, and high-strength adhesives. Thermoplastic Resins Thermoplastic resins soften when heated and harden upon cooling, allowing repeated processing without significant chemical change. Examples include: • Acrylic resins • Polyamide-based resins • Polycarbonate resins • Certain polyurethane systems These resins are preferred for applications requiring recyclability, flexibility in processing, and dimensional precision. Key Industrial Applications of Resins Resins are indispensable across a wide range of industries, including: • Construction & Infrastructure: concrete additives, flooring systems, insulation, pipes, panels • Coatings & Paints: protective coatings, industrial paints, marine and anticorrosion systems • Composites: fiberglass, carbon fiber composites for automotive, aerospace, marine, and wind energy • Adhesives & Sealants: structural bonding, packaging, woodworking, and electronics • Electrical & Electronics: insulation materials, encapsulation compounds, circuit protection • Automotive & Transportation: body panels, coatings, interior components, lightweight composites • Furniture & Wood Products: laminates, varnishes, MDF and particleboard binders Commercial Importance and Global Market Role Resins represent a high-value segment of the global chemical and petrochemical market. Their demand is closely linked to infrastructure development, industrialization, automotive production, renewable energy projects, and advanced manufacturing technologies. Continuous innovation in resin chemistry has led to improved performance, sustainability, and compliance with environmental regulations, including low-VOC, bio-based, and high-efficiency resin systems. Conclusion The resin product group forms a critical foundation of modern industrial materials. With a wide spectrum of chemical compositions and performance characteristics, resins enable the production of durable, high-performance, and cost-effective solutions across nearly every industrial sector. Their strategic importance in global trade, manufacturing, and technological advancement makes resins a core category within the chemical and petrochemical supply chain.

Fertilizers & Agrochemicals

Fertilizers & Agrochemicals represent a critical product group within the global agricultural and chemical supply chain, designed to enhance soil fertility, improve crop productivity, and protect plants from pests, diseases, and weeds. This category plays a fundamental role in ensuring sustainable food production, increasing agricultural efficiency, and supporting modern farming practices worldwide. What Are Fertilizers? Fertilizers are chemical or mineral substances applied to soil or plants to supply essential nutrients required for healthy plant growth. These nutrients compensate for natural soil deficiencies and are vital for maximizing crop yield and quality. Fertilizers are generally classified into the following main categories: • Nitrogen Fertilizers Provide nitrogen (N), essential for vegetative growth and chlorophyll formation. Common products include: • Urea • Ammonium Nitrate • Ammonium Sulfate • Phosphate Fertilizers Supply phosphorus (P), crucial for root development, energy transfer, and early plant growth. Key products include: • Diammonium Phosphate (DAP) • Monoammonium Phosphate (MAP) • Triple Superphosphate (TSP) • Potash Fertilizers Deliver potassium (K), which enhances plant resistance, water regulation, and overall crop quality. Typical products include: • Potassium Chloride (MOP) • Potassium Sulfate (SOP) • Compound & Blended Fertilizers Formulated to provide multiple nutrients in balanced ratios, such as NPK blends, tailored to specific crops and soil conditions. What Are Agrochemicals? Agrochemicals are chemical products used in agriculture to protect crops, control pests and diseases, and manage weeds. They play a crucial role in safeguarding yields and ensuring crop consistency and quality. The main categories of agrochemicals include: • Pesticides Used to control insects and other harmful organisms that damage crops. • Herbicides Designed to eliminate or suppress unwanted weeds that compete with crops for nutrients, water, and sunlight. • Fungicides Applied to prevent or treat fungal diseases that can significantly reduce crop yield and quality. Importance of Fertilizers & Agrochemicals in Modern Agriculture The Fertilizers & Agrochemicals sector supports: • Increased agricultural productivity and food security • Efficient nutrient management and soil optimization • Protection of crops against biological threats • Sustainable farming through controlled and targeted applications With growing global demand for food and agricultural raw materials, this product group remains essential for both developing and industrialized agricultural economies.

Aromatics

Aromatics are a major class of hydrocarbon compounds characterized by the presence of one or more aromatic rings, most commonly based on the benzene ring structure. These compounds are primarily derived from petroleum refining and petrochemical processing, especially through catalytic reforming, steam cracking, and coal tar distillation. Due to their unique molecular stability and reactivity, aromatic hydrocarbons serve as fundamental building blocks for a wide range of chemical, polymer, and industrial products. From a commercial and industrial perspective, aromatics represent one of the most strategic segments of the global petrochemical value chain. They are extensively traded worldwide and are essential feedstocks for industries such as plastics, resins, synthetic fibers, solvents, pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, coatings, adhesives, and fuels. Chemical Characteristics of Aromatics Aromatic compounds are distinguished by: • A planar ring structure with delocalized π (pi) electrons • Exceptional thermal and chemical stability • Predictable substitution reactions rather than simple addition reactions • Strong solvency power and compatibility with many organic materials These characteristics make aromatics highly versatile intermediates in both bulk chemical manufacturing and specialty chemical formulations. Main Products Included in the Aromatics Group The aromatics category encompasses several core products that form the backbone of modern petrochemical industries. Key aromatic products include, but are not limited to: Benzene A primary aromatic hydrocarbon and a cornerstone feedstock used in the production of styrene, phenol, cyclohexane, aniline, and various engineering plastics and resins. Toluene An important aromatic solvent and octane booster, widely used in coatings, adhesives, explosives, and as a precursor for benzene and xylene production. Xylenes (Ortho-, Meta-, Para-Xylene) Critical intermediates for producing polyester fibers (via PTA), plastics, solvents, and chemical coatings. Styrene An aromatic monomer used extensively in the manufacture of polystyrene, ABS, SBR rubber, and insulation materials. Cumene Primarily used to produce phenol and acetone, both of which are essential in resin, adhesive, and polymer industries. Phenol A key aromatic derivative used in phenolic resins, epoxy resins, polycarbonates, pharmaceuticals, and disinfectants. Cyclohexane An aromatic-derived compound mainly consumed in nylon production through adipic acid and caprolactam manufacturing. Industrial Applications of Aromatics Aromatic chemicals play a central role across numerous industries, including: • Plastics & Polymers: polystyrene, PET, nylon, polycarbonate • Resins & Coatings: epoxy, phenolic, alkyd, polyester resins • Textiles: polyester fibers, synthetic yarns • Automotive & Construction: insulation, composites, paints, sealants • Pharmaceuticals & Agrochemicals: active ingredients and intermediates • Solvents & Fuels: industrial solvents, gasoline blending components Their broad application range makes aromatics indispensable in both consumer-facing products and heavy industrial manufacturing. Commercial Importance and Global Trade Aromatics are among the most actively traded petrochemical products globally due to: • High and consistent demand • Large-scale production capacities • Strategic importance in downstream industries • Strong linkage to polymer and resin markets They are typically supplied in bulk shipments, including drums, ISO tanks, IBCs, and tanker vessels, meeting international quality and safety standards.

Olefin Derivatives

What are Olefin Derivatives? Olefins (also called alkenes) are hydrocarbons that contain at least one carbon–carbon double bond; the light, high-volume olefins — ethylene (C₂H₄), propylene (C₃H₆) and 1,3-butadiene (C₄H₆) — are the chemical industry’s primary building blocks. Olefin derivatives are the compounds and polymers produced from these monomers (for example polyethylene from ethylene, polypropylene from propylene and synthetic rubbers from butadiene). Collectively, olefin derivatives underpin plastics, fibers, elastomers, solvents and many chemical intermediates used across packaging, construction, automotive, textiles and consumer goods. The global olefins market is large and expanding, reflecting the central role these building blocks play in modern petrochemistry and manufacturing. Why olefin derivatives matter (commercial view) • Scale & value: Ethylene and propylene derivatives alone represent some of the highest-volume petrochemical value chains worldwide; global ethylene and propylene markets are each measured in hundreds of billions USD and tens of millions of tonnes of production annually. • Downstream leverage: A single change in cracker throughput or feedstock economics (naphtha vs. LPG vs. PDH) cascades through polyethylene, polypropylene and rubber markets, affecting pricing and availability for millions of industrial applications. Market sensitivity is particularly high for butadiene because it is often a by-product of steam crackers and its output can vary with gasoline/demand cycles. 1) Ethylene Derivatives — What they are & why they’re critical Key derivatives • Polyethylene (PE): LDPE, LLDPE, HDPE — the world’s most produced plastic family used in film & packaging, pipes, containers, and consumer goods. • Ethylene Oxide (EO) → Ethylene Glycol (MEG/TMEG): antifreeze, PET polyester fiber & bottle manufacturing (MEG is the monomer feedstock for PET). • Vinyl Chloride Monomer (VCM) → PVC: construction, pipes, window frames and rigid profiles. • Ethylbenzene → Styrene (via dehydrogenation) → Polystyrene/ABS (styrenic family). • Other derivatives: alpha-olefins (comonomers), ethyleneamines, surfactants and solvents. How ethylene is produced for derivatives Industrial ethylene is mainly produced by steam cracking of naphtha or ethane/LPG and is often sold by the cracker operator or integrated petrochemical producer as feedstock for downstream derivatives. Ethylene yields and feedstock mix determine downstream product economics (e.g., whether a plant favors MEG/EO production vs polyethylene). Commercial notes & buyer guidance • Grades & specs: Polyethylene is sold by density and melt index; MEG and VCM are sold to tight purity specs (water, acetaldehyde, stabilizers). • Packaging & logistics: PE in pellet form (bulk bags, bulk rail/truck); MEG/EO/VCM in ISO tanks or chemical tankers with vapor control. • Supply drivers: Petrochemical cracker utilization, feedstock spread (naphtha vs ethane), and PET packaging demand. Monitor site COAs and melt index specs when purchasing polymer grades. 2) Propylene Derivatives — The versatile middle child Key derivatives • Polypropylene (PP): homopolymers and copolymers — automotive parts, fibers, injection molded products, medical components. • Propylene Oxide (PO) → Polyols & Propylene Glycol (PG): polyurethanes (mattresses, insulation, coatings), and glycols for antifreeze and pharmaceutical uses. • Acrylonitrile (via ammoxidation of propylene) → ABS & SAN copolymers: impact plastics and engineering materials. • Cumene (benzene + propylene) → Phenol & Acetone: important aromatic derivative route tied to propylene availability. • Other: isopropanol, polypropylene grades, oxo-alcohols and specialty intermediates. How propylene is sourced Propylene is produced in steam crackers (as a C3 fraction) and increasingly via on-purpose propane dehydrogenation (PDH) units. The mix between cracker and PDH production affects spot supplies and regional trade flows. Propylene market value and volumes are large and regionally concentrated, with Asia-Pacific dominant in capacity and consumption. Commercial notes & buyer guidance • Polypropylene specs: melt flow index (MFI), isotacticity, filler content and UV stabilizers—buyers must match polymer grade to end use (film vs injection molding vs fibers). • Propylene oxide & polyol procurement: require tightly controlled COAs (residual unreacted monomer, peroxide levels). • Supply trends: polypropylene demand is cyclical with automotive and packaging; PDH expansions have increased regional propylene self-sufficiency but also add complexity to spot markets. 3) Butadiene Derivatives — elastomers and high-performance rubbers Key derivatives & applications • Styrene-Butadiene Rubber (SBR): the largest synthetic rubber used in tire treads and general-purpose rubber goods. • Polybutadiene Rubber (PBR): high resilience rubber used in tires (especially sidewalls, inner liners), and impact modifiers. • Nitrile Butadiene Rubber (NBR): oil-resistant rubbers for hoses, seals and gloves. • Acrylonitrile-Butadiene-Styrene (ABS): engineering plastics used in consumer electronics, automotive interiors and housings. • Other: 1,4-polymers, butadiene latexes for adhesives and coatings. Supply & production specifics Butadiene is frequently produced as a by-product from naphtha steam crackers and its availability depends on cracker feedstock and product slate. Because of this by-product nature, butadiene markets can be tighter and more price-volatile than ethylene/propylene — demand for tires and tyre-grade rubbers heavily influences butadiene pricing and capacity decisions. Commercial notes & buyer guidance • Specifications: polymer-grade butadiene is specified for isomer distribution, moisture, and inhibitors. SBR/PBR grade choices determine polymer properties (cis/trans content, vinyl content). • Logistics: butadiene is typically shipped in tailormade tankers or in IBCs with vapor controls. Contracts often include tight QC clauses and contingency volumes due to market volatility. • Market sensitivity: automotive cycles (tire demand) and downstream synthetic rubber plant runs are the primary demand drivers. Market scale & recent market facts (key load-bearing claims) • Global olefins market value and scale: industry reports estimate the global olefins market (ethylene/propylene/butadiene products) measured in hundreds of billions USD; large market houses reported values for 2024 in the ~USD 200–300+ billion range depending on scope. • Ethylene: ethylene is the largest single olefin by volume and by value; market analyses put global ethylene market valuation near ~USD 200+ billion (2024) with expected mid-single-digit CAGR driven by polyethylene and MEG demand. • Propylene: propylene is similarly large; recent market reports value the global propylene market in the order of USD 100–130+ billion (2023–2024) with PDH investments shifting regional dynamics. • Butadiene: butadiene markets are smaller in dollar terms but highly strategic; 2024 data indicate a market in the multi-billion-USD range with robust growth driven by tire and specialty rubber demand, and higher price volatility owing to by-product supply nature. Sustainability, circularity & the future of olefin derivatives • Feedstock shift: the industry is diversifying feedstocks (ethane, LPG, PDH, and bio-based routes) which changes regional cost structures and carbon intensity. • Recycling: mechanical and chemical recycling of polyolefins (PE/PP) is accelerating; buyers increasingly demand recycled-content grades and traceability. • Decarbonization: electrification of steam crackers, CCUS for crackers and greener hydrogen for dehydrogenation routes are active areas of investment. Expect procurement to include scope-1/2 emission data in tender rounds going forward.

Specialty Chemicals

What Are Specialty Chemicals? Specialty chemicals are a distinct class of chemical products designed and manufactured to deliver specific performance functions rather than bulk chemical composition. Unlike commodity chemicals, which are sold primarily based on volume and price, specialty chemicals are valued for their functional performance, formulation expertise, application efficiency, and end-use benefits. These chemicals are typically produced in lower volumes but higher value, and they play a critical role in enhancing product quality, processing efficiency, durability, safety, and aesthetics across a wide range of industries. Specialty chemicals are essential inputs in sectors such as: • Plastics and polymers • Construction and infrastructure • Automotive and transportation • Textiles and coatings • Agriculture and crop protection • Personal care and household products • Electronics and packaging Their market demand is driven by performance requirements, regulatory standards, and technological innovation, rather than pure consumption volume. Scope of Specialty Chemicals The specialty chemicals category includes products that are: • Application-specific • Formulation-driven • Performance-critical • Technically differentiated These chemicals are often customized according to customer needs and are integrated into complex formulations where precise chemical behavior is required. Within this category, three of the most commercially important and widely traded product groups are: 1. DOP (Dioctyl Phthalate) 2. Pigments & Dyes 3. Surfactants 1. DOP (Dioctyl Phthalate) Overview Dioctyl Phthalate (DOP) is one of the most widely used plasticizers in the global polymer industry. It is primarily employed to improve the flexibility, softness, workability, and durability of plastic materials, especially PVC (polyvinyl chloride). DOP is classified as a specialty performance additive, as its value lies in how it modifies the physical and mechanical behavior of polymers rather than acting as a raw structural material. Key Properties and Functions • Excellent plasticizing efficiency • High compatibility with PVC resins • Good low-temperature flexibility • Strong resistance to migration • Long-term mechanical stability Major Applications • Flexible PVC products (cables, hoses, films, sheets) • Synthetic leather and flooring • Coated fabrics • Automotive interiors • Footwear and consumer goods Commercial Importance Despite increasing regulatory scrutiny in certain regions, DOP remains highly demanded in many global markets due to its proven performance, cost efficiency, and well-established processing behavior. It is widely traded in bulk packaging such as drums, IBCs, and flexitanks for industrial use. 2. Pigments & Dyes Overview Pigments and dyes are specialty colorants used to impart color, opacity, brightness, and visual identity to materials and products. While both serve coloring purposes, they differ in chemical behavior and application methods: • Pigments are insoluble particles dispersed in a medium • Dyes are soluble substances that chemically bind to substrates Functional Role In specialty chemical applications, pigments and dyes are not only aesthetic components but also functional additives that can influence: • UV resistance • Thermal stability • Chemical resistance • Product identification and branding Key Application Industries • Plastics and polymers • Paints and industrial coatings • Printing inks • Textiles and fibers • Packaging materials • Construction products Specialty Value Pigments and dyes are selected based on precise performance criteria, including color strength, dispersion quality, fastness, regulatory compliance, and compatibility with end-use systems. Their formulation and application knowledge make them a core segment of specialty chemicals. 3. Surfactants Overview Surfactants (surface-active agents) are specialty chemicals that modify the interaction between different phases, such as liquid-liquid or liquid-solid systems. Their unique molecular structure allows them to reduce surface tension and enable processes that would otherwise be impossible. Core Functions • Emulsification • Wetting • Detergency • Dispersion • Foaming or defoaming Classification Surfactants are commonly categorized into: • Anionic surfactants • Cationic surfactants • Non-ionic surfactants • Amphoteric surfactants Each type is selected based on application requirements, formulation compatibility, and performance expectations. Key Applications • Detergents and cleaning products • Personal care formulations • Textile processing • Agrochemicals • Emulsion polymerization • Industrial and institutional cleaning Commercial Significance Surfactants are indispensable in modern formulations and represent a high-growth specialty chemical segment, driven by demand for advanced cleaning solutions, environmentally optimized products, and high-performance industrial processes.

Petroleum products

Petroleum Products are a broad range of commercially valuable materials derived from the refining and processing of crude oil and natural gas liquids. These products form the backbone of the global energy system and serve as essential raw materials for transportation, manufacturing, petrochemical, agricultural, and industrial sectors worldwide. Crude oil itself has limited direct use; its true economic value is realized through refining processes such as atmospheric distillation, vacuum distillation, cracking, reforming, hydrotreating, and blending. These processes separate crude oil into distinct fractions and convert them into market-ready products with specific physical and chemical properties tailored for end-use applications. Petroleum products are traded globally and are critical to both energy security and industrial supply chains, making them among the most strategically important commodities in international commerce. Main Categories of Petroleum Products 1. Fuel Products Fuel products represent the largest share of petroleum consumption and are primarily used for energy generation and transportation. Key fuel products include: • Gasoline (Petrol) – Used in passenger vehicles and light transportation. • Diesel Fuel – Essential for heavy-duty transport, marine vessels, generators, and industrial machinery. • Jet Fuel (Aviation Turbine Fuel) – Specifically refined for aircraft engines. • Fuel Oil (Light & Heavy) – Used in power plants, marine engines, and industrial boilers. • Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) – A mixture of propane and butane used for heating, cooking, and as an industrial fuel. 2. Petrochemical Feedstocks These petroleum products serve as primary raw materials for the chemical and plastics industries. Major petrochemical feedstocks include: • Naphtha – A critical feedstock for steam crackers producing ethylene, propylene, and aromatics. • Ethane, Propane, and Butane – Used in olefin production and energy applications. • Aromatic Streams (BTX) – Benzene, Toluene, and Xylenes used to manufacture polymers, resins, fibers, and solvents. These feedstocks enable the production of plastics, synthetic rubber, fibers, solvents, detergents, and countless consumer and industrial goods. 3. Lubricants and Base Oils Lubricants are refined petroleum products designed to reduce friction, wear, and heat in mechanical systems. They include: • Base Oils (Group I, II, III) – Used to formulate automotive and industrial lubricants. • Engine Oils – For gasoline and diesel engines. • Industrial Oils – Hydraulic oils, gear oils, compressor oils, and turbine oils. • Greases – Semi-solid lubricants for heavy-load and high-temperature applications. 4. Asphalt and Bitumen Products These heavy petroleum fractions are primarily used in construction and infrastructure. Applications include: • Road paving and highways • Roofing materials • Waterproofing and insulation systems Bitumen demand is closely linked to urban development and infrastructure projects. 5. Specialty and Industrial Petroleum Products This category includes refined products used in industrial, agricultural, and commercial applications: • Petroleum Coke (Petcoke) – Used as a fuel and in metallurgical processes. • Solvents – Mineral spirits, hexane, heptane, and other hydrocarbon solvents. • Wax Products – Paraffin wax and microcrystalline wax for packaging, cosmetics, candles, and coatings. • Sulfur – A by-product of refining, essential for fertilizer and chemical production. Commercial Importance of Petroleum Products Petroleum products play a central role in global trade, with standardized specifications governed by international bodies such as ASTM, ISO, EN, and API. Their pricing is influenced by crude oil markets, refinery capacity, logistics, geopolitical factors, and regional demand patterns. They are transported worldwide via: • Tankers and bulk vessels • Pipelines • Rail and road tankers • ISO tanks and industrial packaging Conclusion Petroleum products represent a diverse and indispensable group of energy and industrial commodities, spanning fuels, chemical feedstocks, lubricants, construction materials, and specialty products. Their versatility, scalability, and integration into nearly every industrial sector make them a cornerstone of the modern global economy.

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Why You Choose Us

APIT Petrochemicals Trading LLC is a Dubai-based company specializing in the global trade of petroleum products, chemicals, polymers, and fertilizers. With a strong supply chain network and partnerships across the Middle East, Asia, and Europe, we deliver high-quality products that meet international standards. Our commitment to reliability, efficiency, and customer satisfaction has positioned us as a trusted partner for industries ranging from energy and construction to agriculture and manufacturing.

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Our products power essential industries worldwide — from energy and infrastructure to agriculture and advanced manufacturing. By combining technical expertise with efficient supply chain management, we deliver solutions that enhance productivity and operational efficiency.

Frequently Asked Questions

What products does APIT Petrochemicals Trading LLC supply?

We offer a wide range of products including petroleum products, basic chemicals, polymers, resins, fertilizers, aromatics, olefin derivatives, and specialty chemicals.

Our partners and buyers are importers and exporters operating across various regions of the world, including Europe, Asia, and the CIS and GCC areas.

 We have established most of our business relationships with reputable companies within the CI, Middle East and GCC regions. We are fully prepared to supply the products and services requested by our customers to destinations worldwide.

Yes, all our products are sourced from reputable global manufacturers and are verified through accredited laboratories, ensuring full compliance with the relevant international standards. Before finalizing any order, the product specifications and quality levels are confirmed by the buyer through the review of the technical datasheet.

 The credibility of our company is built on consistently supplying top‑quality products that meet the latest global standards.

Yes, we can arrange bulk shipments. Our team is fully committed to meeting customer requirements, and in most cases, the packaging and method of shipment are carried out according to the buyer’s preferences. Bulk loading of various products is available and can be arranged upon request.

However, in certain cases—based on the manufacturer’s recommendations or international regulations for the transportation of hazardous materials—the shipment may only be allowed in specific, non‑modifiable packaging. In such situations, we do our best to accommodate the buyer’s expectations and assure them that the method we recommend is the safest and most reliable option for transporting the  product.

There are several ways to request a quotation:

 

  1. You can visit the “Contact Us” section on our website and submit the details of your inquiry.
  2. You may also send us a message via WhatsApp or call the phone numbers listed on our website to share your request directly.
  3. Our email addresses — info.ru@apitpetro.com and sales.ru@apitpetro.com — are available for any questions or quotation inquiries you may have.

 

Whichever method you choose, our team is ready to respond to your questions and requests as quickly as possible.

Yes, we can provide customized packaging or blends, depending on the customer’s request and the feasibility confirmed by the manufacturer. In most cases, we are able to adjust the packaging type, size, or labeling, and customized blends can be arranged when technically possible. However, certain products may only be supplied in standard packaging or fixed specifications due to the producer’s protocols or international regulations. We always do our best to accommodate the buyer’s requirements while ensuring safety, compliance, and product integrity.

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