Home>News & Insights>Publications>Naphtha shortage threatens Asia's chemical sectors and global chipmakingNaphtha shortage threatens Asia’s chemical sectors and global chipmaking CEIC Publications Ana Cuello Franco 12.05.2026 under a minute read The disruption to Middle East crude flows is rippling through the upstream petrochemical sector and downstream supply chains, especially in Asia. Naphtha, a light oil derived from crude refining, is key to making the “petrochemical intermediates” deployed to manufacture plastics, rubbers, solvents and resins – which, in turn, are used across industries ranging from packaging to construction, cars and semiconductors. Prices have surged in South Korea – home to one of the world’s most naphtha-intensive clusters. LG Chem, the nation’s largest chemical company, has shut down one of its facilities. Meanwhile, Japan dominates the supply of photoresist – the naphtha-derived substance used to print chips; suppliers like JSR Corporation are telling customers such as Samsung and SK Hynix that they are having trouble sourcing raw materials. Tags ChemicalsEnergyJapanTechnologyRecent Posts Indonesia's resource nationalism may be aimed at lifting rupiah as well as widening tax base CEIC 26.06.2026 Insights President Prabowo Subianto recently announced plans to channel all of Indonesia's "strategic" commodity exports through DSI, a new company set Read More China’s companies are getting more for their goods, but margins remain a challenge CEIC 26.06.2026 Insights Factory-gate prices in #China rose for a third consecutive month in May, a supportive trend for the nation's companies. Will Read More “Physical AI” is powering the next robotics cycle CEIC 26.06.2026 Insights Robotics and automation are moving from the world of manufacturing efficiency to a broader "physical AI" story, taking the artificial-intelligence Read More Sorry, no articles match the current filters. Sorry, no articles match the current search query.