Greetings, and welcome to the Dow fourth quarter 2023 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question- and- answer session will follow the formal presentation. If you would like to ask a question at that time, please press * followed by 1 on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I will now turn it over to Dow Investor Relations Vice President, Pankaj Gupta. Mr. Gupta, you may begin.
Good morning. Thank you for joining today. The accompanying slides are provided through this webcast and posted on our website. I'm Pankaj Gupta, Dow Investor Relations Vice President, and joining me are Jim Fitterling, Dow's Chair and Chief Executive Officer, and Jeff Tate, Chief Financial Officer. Please note our comments contain forward-looking statements and are subject to the related cautionary statement contained in the earnings news release and slides. Please refer to our public filings for further information about principal risks and uncertainties. Unless otherwise specified, all financials, where applicable, exclude significant items. We also will refer to non-GAAP measures. A reconciliation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure and other associated disclosures are contained in the earnings news release and slides that are posted on our website. On Slide 2 is our agenda for today's call.
Jim will review our fourth quarter results, full year highlights, and operating segment performance. Jeff will provide an update on the macroeconomic environment, our strong financial position through the cycle, as well as the modeling guidance. To close, Jim will provide an update on key milestones for our long-term growth and sustainability roadmap, which will continue to drive shareholder value. Following that, we will take your questions. Now, let me turn the call over to Jim.
Thank you, Pankaj. Beginning on Slide 3, in the fourth quarter, we continued to execute with discipline and advance our long-term strategy in the face of a dynamic macroeconomic environment. Net sales were $10.6 billion, down 10% versus a year ago period, reflecting declines in all operating segments. Sales were down 1% sequentially, as volume gains in Packaging & Specialty Plastics were more than offset by seasonal demand declines in Performance Materials & Coatings. Volume increased 2% year-over-year, with gains across all regions except Asia-Pacific, which was flat. Sequentially, volume decreased by 1%, including the impact of an unplanned event from a storm that was equivalent to a Category 1 hurricane at our Bahía Blanca site in Argentina. Local price decreased 13% year-over-year, with declines in all operating segments due to lower feedstocks and energy costs.
Sequentially, price was flat, reflecting modest gains in most regions. Operating EBIT for the quarter was $559 million, down $42 million year-over-year, primarily driven by lower prices. Sequentially, Operating EBIT was down $67 million, as gains in Packaging & Specialty Plastics were more than offset by seasonally lower volumes in Performance Materials & Coatings. Our cash flow generation and working capital management enabled us to deliver cash flow from operations of $1.6 billion in the quarter. We continued to reduce costs and focus on cash generation, completing our $1 billion of cost savings for the year. In the fourth quarter, we pursued additional de-risking opportunities for our pension plans, including annuitization and risk transfer of $1.7 billion in pension liability and a one-time non-cash and non-operating settlement charge of $642 million.
We also advanced our long-term strategy while returning $616 million to shareholders. We reached final investment decision with our board of directors for our Path2Zero project in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta. Now turning to our full year performance on Slide 4. Our 2023 results demonstrate strong execution and a commitment to financial discipline. Against the dynamic macroeconomic backdrop, Team Dow continued to take proactive actions. As a result, we generated $5.2 billion in cash flow from operations for the year, reflecting a cash flow conversion of 96%. We also returned $2.6 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. Our efforts continue to be recognized externally through industry-leading awards, certifications, and recognitions, and we continue to outpace our peers on leadership diversity.
I'm proud of how Team Dow is delivering for our customers, driving shareholder value, and supporting our communities as we progress our long-term strategy. Now turning to operating segment performance on Slide 5. In the packaging and specialty plastics segment, operating EBIT was $664 million, up $9 million compared to the year ago period. Results were driven by lower input costs and higher operating rates, where we closed out the year strong and hit record ethylene production levels on a full year basis. Local price declines were driven by lower global prices, while volume increases were led by higher packaging demand for primarily in the U.S., Canada, and Latin America. Sequentially, operating EBIT increased by $188 million. This was driven by higher integrated polyethylene margins, the impact of planned maintenance activity in the third quarter, and higher licensing revenue.
Moving to the Industrial I ntermediates & Infrastructure segment, operating EBIT was $15 million, compared to $164 million in the year-ago period. Results were driven by lower local prices in both businesses, as well as reduced supply availability in Industrial Solutions. Sequentially, operating EBIT was down $6 million, driven by seasonally lower volumes in building and construction end markets, which were partially offset by seasonally higher demand for de-icing fluid and higher demand for mobility applications. And in the Performance Materials & Coatings segment, operating EBIT was a loss of $61 million, compared to a loss of $130 million in the year-ago period, driven by lower costs and reduced planned maintenance turnaround activity. Volume was up year-over-year, driven by higher demand in project-driven building and construction end markets.
Sequentially, operating EBIT decreased $240 million, primarily due to seasonally lower volumes. Next, I'll turn it over to Jeff to review our outlook and actions on Slide 6.
Thank you, Jim. Before I begin, I'd like to mention how excited I am to have rejoined Dow last November. I've been connecting with key stakeholders, analysts, and shareholders, including many of you on this call today, and I look forward to meeting with so many others in the future. After 4 years serving in a CFO role outside of Dow, I'm pleased to see that Dow's culture of execution, commitment to advancing our ambition, and the focus everyone has demonstrated on delivering on our financial priorities since then, remains. This is an exciting time for the company. As CFO, I'm proud to carry forward Dow's commitment to maintaining a disciplined and balanced approach to capital allocation over the economic cycle as we advance our growth strategies and deliver long-term value for shareholders. Now, for our outlook on Slide 6.
As we enter 2024, we expect near-term demand to remain pressured by elevated inflation, high interest rates, and geopolitical tension, particularly in building and construction and durable goods end markets. That said, we are seeing some initial positive indicators. While inflation is still elevated compared to pre-COVID levels, its growth rate is moderating, supporting more stable economic conditions. In addition, the destocking that began in late 2022 has largely run its course, resulting in low inventory levels throughout most of our value chains. In the U.S., industrial activity continues to be moderate. In December, industrial production increased 1% year-over-year, and chemical railcar loadings are up 9.6% in January versus the prior year. U.S. consumer spending has remained resilient, with retail trade sales up 4.8% in December.
We're also encouraged by recent forecasts from the American Coatings Association, which expects market demand to grow approximately 3% in 2024, following 3 consecutive years of declines. In Europe, while inflation has moderated, consumer demand remains weak, with retail trade sales down 1.1% year- over- year in November. In December, manufacturing PMI remained in contractionary territory, and new car registrations fell 3.3% year- over- year after 16 consecutive months of growth. We continue to monitor China, where we see improving conditions, which could provide a source of demand recovery following the Lunar New Year. Industrial production was up 6.8% year- over- year last month, exceeding market estimates of 6.6%. December auto sales also continue to be strong in China, supported by year-end incentives. In other regions around the world, industrial activity remains constructive.
While India manufacturing PMI remains expansionary, ASEAN manufacturing PMI in a contractionary territory last month. In Mexico, November marked the 25th consecutive month of industrial production growth. On Slide 7, our competitive advantages, early cycle growth investments, and operational discipline position us well to capitalize on a recovery and deliver growth when economic conditions improve. Our differentiated portfolio with structurally advantaged assets, global scale, and strong cost positions enable us to competitively support global demand growth over the cycle. Healthy oil to gas spreads, supported by growing natural gas and NGL production in the U.S., favor our cost advantage and ability to capture margin momentum. We've also taken actions to position the company for profitable growth, including ongoing execution of near-term investments that are expected to deliver approximately $2 billion in incremental underlying EBITDA by mid-decade.
In addition, we've improved our cost profile, delivering $1 billion in targeted savings in 2023, that included lower plant maintenance spending and structural improvements to raw materials, logistics, and utility costs. In addition, more than 90% of the 2,000 impacted roles exited by year-end. Our strong balance sheet allows us to navigate the bottom of the cycle and have the strength to capitalize on the next upside in the global economy. Turning to our outlook for the first quarter on Slide 8. In the Packaging & Specialty Plastics segment, lower feedstock and energy costs will be more than offset by lower earnings from non-recurring licensing activity from the prior quarter, resulting in a $25 million headwind. Additionally, we expect a $50 million headwind due to higher plant maintenance activity at select energy assets in the US Gulf Coast.
In the Industrial Intermediates & I nfrastructure segment, we expect margin expansion on higher MDI and MEG spreads, as well as lower European energy costs, resulting in a $50 million tailwind. Increased seasonal demand for de-icing fluid is expected to provide a $25 million tailwind, despite being partly offset by continued weakness in consumer durables demand. We also expect a headwind of $50 million due to planned maintenance activity in the quarter, primarily related to a PDH turnaround and catalyst change. In the performance materials and coatings segment, downward pressure is expected to continue due to excess supply from competitive supply additions that will keep margins at depressed levels. However, we expect higher seasonal demand in building and construction end markets to contribute a $150 million tailwind for the segment.
We also expect higher planned maintenance turnaround activity at our Deer Park acrylic monomer site and PDH to result in a $50 million headwind in the quarter. With all the puts and takes, we expect first quarter earnings to be approximately $25 million-$50 million above fourth quarter performance. Next, I'll turn it back to Jim.
Thank you, Jeff. Moving to Slide 9, our Decarbonize and Grow and Transform the Waste strategies uniquely position us to capitalize on demand for more sustainable and circular solutions across our attractive market verticals. Altogether, by 2030, these investments enable us to deliver an increase of more than $3 billion to our underlying earnings through the cycle, while reducing Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 5 million metric tons and commercializing 3 million metric tons of circular and renewable solutions annually. In November, we reached a key milestone as our Path2Zero project in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, achieved final investment decision by our board of directors. We also continue to advance our Transform the Waste strategy via intentional actions, strategic partnerships, and offtake agreements.
In the fourth quarter, Valoregen's 15,000 tons per year mechanical recycling line in France achieved mechanical completion, and Mura Technology in the UK commenced commissioning, which is expected to contribute 20,000 tons per year of advanced recycling capacity. Both Valoregen and Mura expect to reach commercialization in the first half of this year. As the next step of our sustainability strategy, Dow has established a Green Finance Framework, which was published on our investor website today. This allows us to further align our funding with our goals and targets, while also providing an opportunity for the investor community to take part in the execution of our sustainability strategy. Altogether, we remain confident in our long-term earnings growth with continued focus on a more sustainable future while maintaining a disciplined and balanced approach to capital allocation.
Now, turning to Slide 10, polyethylene demand is expected to continue to grow at approximately 1.2x-1.4 x GDP through 2050. A growing population, regulations, and consumer preferences support this, and our customers have expressed an increasing need for low and zero carbon emissions and circular products. As global demand grows, no new cost-advantaged ethylene capacity is expected to come online in North America until the late 2026-2027 timeframe, which is expected to tighten the supply-demand balance in the near term. We are well positioned to capture new and growing demand with our existing assets and partnership agreements. In addition, we are investing in low carbon emissions infrastructure to capture growing demand for polyethylene, as you will see on Slide 11.
Our Fort Saskatchewan project will build upon the strong foundation of our Texas-9 cracker, where we have proven our best-in-class execution, capital efficiency, reliability, and emissions reduction. Canada's feedstock cost advantage provides Dow with lower cash costs compared to the rest of the world, even more advantaged than the US Gulf Coast. We also anticipate potential upside from the commercialization of low and zero emissions products. Total CapEx spend is expected to be $6.5 billion on this key growth project, excluding any incentives, with Dow's total enterprise CapEx to ramp in 2024 to approximately $3 billion and exceed depreciation and amortization levels annually through 2027. We remain committed to keeping our CapEx within D&A across the economic cycle and expect to return to those levels as we complete this project.
We expect to receive governmental support totaling more than $1.5 billion in cash and tax incentives that will bring the net capital outlay for this project to $5 billion. The majority of these incentives are expected to be received by Dow through 2030, which is closely aligned with our CapEx deployment for the project. We will begin construction in the first half of 2024, with phase one startup of approximately 1.3 million tons per year of capacity expected in 2027. In phase two, we will add another 600,000 tons of capacity, which is expected to start up in 2029. Phase two also includes the retrofit of our existing cracker, reducing net 1 million metric tons per year of CO2 Scope 1 and 2 emissions.
Closing on Slide 12, the actions we've taken since then have strengthened our balance sheet, increased cash flow, and enhanced the financial flexibility and resilience of our business. In 2023, we built on that foundation, moving swiftly to deliver $1 billion in cost savings and focus on cash generation as economic conditions remain challenging. As a result, we delivered on all of our capital allocation priorities, including a fully funded dividend, $625 million of share repurchases, and growth investments, all while maintaining the strongest balance sheet we've ever had at this part of the cycle. With all of our debt at fixed rate, we have no substantive debt maturities due until 2027 and $13 billion of available liquidity.
Additionally, we have returned approximately 90% of our net income to shareholders since then, well above our 65% target across the economic cycle. With global reach, presence in attractive end markets, and advantaged cost position, and early-stage growth investments in flight, we are well positioned to capture attractive growth opportunities as economic conditions recover. With that, I'll turn it back to Pankaj to open the Q&A.
Thank you, Jim. Now, let's move on to your questions. I would like to remind you that our forward-looking statements apply to both our prepared remarks as well as the following Q&A. Operator, please provide the Q&A instructions.
At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press Star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question only. Your first question comes from a line of Hassan Ahmed from Alembic Global Advisors. Your line is open.
Morning, Jim. Jim, you know, a couple of times through the prepared remarks, you talked about inventory. You know, it just seems that there are two camps out there in terms of the thought process with regards to, you know, what a potential restocking may look like. And I'd love to hear your views about that. You know, on one side of the debate, you know, people are sitting there and saying: Hey, look, you know, since the second half of 2022, you know, the destocking was quite significant and, you know, maybe as and when we should expect an equally impressive restock.
But then on the other side of the camp, you know, you have some of the folks sort of debating that, you know, buying patterns across, you know, the supply chains changed quite dramatically, you know, coming out of the pandemic, and maybe a restock, you know, could not look that impressive. So I'd love to hear your views, and if you could also sort of elaborate on that, you know, within some of the main product chains, be it polyethylene, polyurethanes, and the like.
Morning, Hassan. I think that's a great question. I think one of the reasons that December and fourth quarter ended up stronger than expected, especially I'll use packaging and specialty plastics as an example, was because, you know, you had a pretty mixed year in 2023, and, you know, in December, you can sometimes see the behavior that last half of December, things slow down, and people manage cash, and they don't buy. That was not what we experienced in December. We actually experienced strong demand right through the month. I don't think that's an indication of restocking, but I do think it's an indication that inventories are low through the supply chains, and the consumer demand was resilient, and so people had to buy to keep their supply chains moving.
So I would say through the value chains today, and almost all the businesses, it looks like there's not an excess of inventory out there, and as demand is coming, people are having to buy to keep the chains full. Secondly, inventories are low in areas like PNSP, Industrial Solutions, because, you know, the arbitrage is open, and our own footprint, 85% of our own global footprint is in light cracking, jurisdictions where we crack ethane and propane, which have been highly advantaged. And so that's what allowed us to set an ethylene record for the year. I would say we're not—I don't think we're in a restocking cycle yet. I think people are, you know, coming together around a soft landing here. I mean, we're seeing positive signs on housing permits.
That doesn't turn into housing demand until we start to see, say, maybe interest rates come down. If interest rates come down in the second quarter, maybe you start to see some pickup in housing, construction, and that starts to show up more toward the back half of the year. You've got to remember that energy costs are low, and so if people are thinking, you know, that energy costs are low, and I'm still able to buy at reasonable prices going forward, there may not be a reason for them then to a big restock right now. But this will turn, and as energy costs start to move up and the whole complex starts to move up with demand, I think at that point, I think we would be wise to keep our eye on what's happening with the potential for restock.
It might just be a little soon right now.
Your next question comes from the line of Mike Sison from Wells Fargo. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. Nice, nice end of the year. I'm just curious, you know. You had good volume growth in PSP in the fourth quarter. Do you expect that to continue into the first? And maybe any of your thoughts on how your operating rates for polyethylene will sort of improve sequentially and the cadence for the year?
Yeah, thanks, Michael. Good question. Operating rates in the advantaged regions, especially Canada, US Gulf Coast, Argentina, were strong through the end of the year. I mentioned ethylene production record. We saw rates above 90% in those regions for the fourth quarter. And obviously, we, you know, we saw a little bit of an improvement in Europe. I'd say the Suez Canal situation means not as much material from the Middle East is flowing into Europe, and so that's given Europe a little bit of a lift on operating rates as we go into the first quarter. And of course, with propane being where it is, we've, you know, we're cracking LPGs in Terneuzen and Tarragona, and that's helping out a bit there. I would say, I think PNSP is gonna continue to see good volume growth.
That's what our outlook is going forward. I think Industrial Solutions is holding up relatively well. We have our own self-inflicted issue with the Plaquemine glycol plant, but I'm expecting that back up in the second quarter. And, you know, we're watching carefully on construction chemicals demand and durable goods to see if we see an uptick there. We saw some good movement in consumer electronics, and so, you know, that's got me a little bit optimistic.
Your next question comes from the line of Vincent Andrews from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Hi, thanks. Maybe 2 quick ones from me. Just on Slide 7, you have some project starts that are going from 2024 to 2026. Talk about how material some of that might be for 2024, and then also, if you could just give us an update on what you did with the pension, ending the year.
Yeah. On project starts, you know, we've got things that we've got coming up, obviously, is we've got some alkoxylation capacity that came up, you know, in 2022 and 2023, that's running really well. We started up the MDI distillation facility in Freeport in the third quarter. I think that'll start to show some positive benefits us as we move forward. That's about a 30% increase in MDI distillation and also reduction of a footprint, getting us out of the La Porte site. And we've got Seadrift alkoxylation second wave expansion in fourth quarter this year, and then Terneuzen in fourth quarter of 2025. Both of that supports a growing demand in energy and also Consumer Solutions and pharma business, so that's good.
Amines business for carbon capture is growing well, and so that's good. If you look at plastics industry, there's really no new capacity coming out in plastics, save one train at the Shell plant in the United States. Otherwise, all the plastics capacity is in the market. Inventories are low, export channels running strong, and we saw volume growth year-over-year in the fourth quarter. So I feel good about the overall outlook for plastics as we're going into 2024. When you get into polyolefins, our polyurethanes and propylene oxide, a little bit different story. We've had capacity come on in China. We've seen the same in siloxanes last year. I think we're working through that.
The silicones growth is gonna eat up that siloxanes capacity, but we've got to see the durable goods market and the housing market come back to tighten up PO. Propylene glycol side has been strong, but as you know, housing and automotive drives PP a lot. Those two things drive the propylene markets, and we've got to keep a close eye on them.
Your next..
On the pension, Jeff, do you wanna cover pension and what we did?
Sure, Jim. You know, as we've been communicating to the street here in recent quarters, one of the things that we're consistently looking to do as we're solidifying our financial position, is look for ways to derisk our pension plans. And, you know, one of those could be around monetization as well as risk transfer of our liabilities. So specifically in fourth quarter, we were actually able to reduce our pension liabilities by $1.7 billion. The execution of those transactions did not require any additional cash from the company. As Jim mentioned in some of his opening remarks, you know, the impact of that was a one-time, non-cash, non-operating settlement charge of $640 million in the quarter.
Our next question comes from a line of Jeffrey Zekauskas from JP Morgan. Your line is open.
Thanks very much. Recently, there was a cold snap in Texas, and I didn't notice that there was any penalty in EBITDA for the first quarter. Are you still assessing what the amounts might be, or do you think that it's zero? And then, secondly, you pulled out $1 billion in costs. Can you allocate the $1 billion across your three segments?
Sure. I'll take the cold snap, and then, Jeff, I'll have you take a look at the costs. Look, on the freeze, Jeff, I just wanna go back. Two years ago, this is the third consecutive year of freeze on the Gulf Coast, and we've improved plans every year to be able to be ready for that. This year will be the lowest impact that we've had of any of the three years. And so, you know, the big impacts that hit us were at Deer Park and at Seadrift, but almost all of that is back up and running now, so we were able to rebound pretty quickly. You know, you never go completely unscathed, but I think we managed through it pretty well.
We haven't had to disrupt any customers because of downtime, and I think we're gonna recover pretty strong here and be running hard by the end of this month. So I feel that we've navigated it pretty well, and we didn't see enough of an impact that we put that into first quarter estimates. I think our biggest delta in first quarter is we've got quite a few turnarounds in the first quarter, and so that's our biggest impact, about $200 million turnarounds in the quarter, $150 million. And then, you know, we expect some margin and some seasonality in first quarter, say, +$200 million on margins and -$150 million on turnarounds in the quarter. So that's the biggest net-net on the first quarter 2024 guidance.
Jeff, do you want to hit, you know, how the $1 billion costs fell across the business?
Absolutely, Jim. In the simplest terms, about 50% of those cost savings are in PNFP. 25%, 20%-25% are in the other two segments, respectively, and we also have a little bit in corporate as well. So pretty well distributed based on our operations and our revenues as well.
We ended the year at a $1.4 billion run- rate on that. So if you look at full year 2024, Jeff, we still got another $400 million coming in in terms of the cost savings for 2024, but we have $200 million of higher turnarounds in 2024. So net-net, $200 million coming into 2024. I hope that covers what you're looking for.
Your next question comes from the line of Steve Byrne from Bank of America. Your line is open.
Yes, thank you. I'd like to get some help from you on, you know, why were the earnings in PM&C so much lower than what you were expecting, say, in the third quarter Slide deck? Would you attribute this to just lower pricing, higher raws? You know, help me on this one. And maybe in particular, coatings, you know, you got a key customer raising price and targeting mid-single digit, lower raws. You know, your propylene costs are higher. Why not able to push more price in this segment or cut back on operating rates or something along those lines? What's your outlook for that segment?
Yeah, good, good question, Steve. I'd say starting at the top, siloxanes and monomers, in the Siloxanes and Silicones and Monomers and Coatings and Monomers are both oversupplied, and so that put pressure, obviously, on both volume and pricing in the quarter. And you had volumes decrease sequentially across all regions and all markets, and that's not unusual, especially in coatings and monomers. That's pretty typical in fourth quarter that we would see that. But silicones was a little bit softer, and I think that was the biggest delta there. Year- over- year, they were down on price, which was because of that supply demand for both siloxane and acrylic monomers. The downstreams, in terms of the coating, the binders business and coating, held up relatively well and actually had decent volumes in the fourth quarter.
So what we supply to the downstream coatings customers looked good, and as we mentioned, our view going forward is about a 3% increase this year in downstream coatings. And I'd say downstream silicone silicones demand continues to hold up pretty well. I'd say the one thing we're keeping an eye on is what happens with EV volume production. EV drives a lot of silicones content, a lot into batteries, and so we need to keep an eye on that. But the other segments in silicones are all showing pretty substantial growth for 2024. It's those upstream monomers markets that we're gonna keep an eye on, and I think things will start to tighten up a bit in China, and that will help on siloxanes.
Your next question comes from a line of Josh Spector from UBS. Your line is open.
Yeah, hi, good morning. I was wondering if you'd comment on your polyethylene price assumptions in the first quarter. I think within your bridge, you talk about lower costs and some other moving pieces, but there's not really anything there on price. So are you assuming that you get positive pricing in February and March, like some of the consultant data shows, or are you assuming something different? Thank you.
Morning, Josh. We've got, five-cent price increases on the table for January and February. I would say, you know, globally, we're looking pretty flat, quarter-over-quarter on pricing. I'm expecting to see some price up, in EMEA. I mentioned the Suez Canal and the impact that had on Middle East volumes going up into EMEA, so I think we're gonna see that up. I think we're gonna see price up in Asia Pacific, and I think we're gonna see it relatively flat in the Americas. Integrated margins for the Americas ought to be about where they were in the fourth quarter. Integrated margins in Europe should be up, a few cents. That's what the, the market markers would look at right now. And, input costs are, are in line. I mean, even though we had that cold snap, natural gas costs are-...
Very competitive. I think costs are very competitive. Propane been a little bit high, because of the heating demand, but I think that may start to come off a little bit as we move through this cold spell.
Your next question comes from the line of David Begleiter from Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning. Jim, you highlight the US chemical railcar loading is up 10%. What do you think is driving that? And given a strong start to the quarter, do you expect volumes to be up in all three segments in Q1? Thank you.
Yeah, look, I think on chemical railcar loadings, industrial production in the US is starting to come back. The US has a tremendous cost advantage. Operating rates in most of the sectors are up. And I, you know, I think the destocking, being, you know, it's always hard to have enough visibility to call the end of it, but I think what we saw in December were signs that that destocking has worked through. So, any downstream demand is turning into orders, and I think that's what you're seeing with the railcar loadings. You know, I also remember, you know, railcars service the Mexican market as well. Mexico has been very strong. They've benefited a lot from nearshoring. And so having both China volumes up and Mexico volumes up, I think is a positive here.
I would say on volumes, my expectations, we have volume growth for all three segments for 2024. I think that's gonna start to materialize. I think plastics is underway right now. I think construction chemicals, housing-related demand on polyurethanes will probably be geared more towards the back half of the year. I think downstream silicones, Industrial Solutions, will be throughout the year. And then we'll have a step up in Industrial Solutions when we get the Glycol II plant back in, in Plaquemine. And I think I can speak for the business here that, you know, as soon as we get that plant back up, we'll have it sold out. So we're working really hard to get that thing back online.
Your next question comes from a line of Laurence Alexander from Jefferies. Your line is open.
Hi, this is Dan Rizzo, on for Lawrence. Thank you for taking my call. Can we just discuss your strategy on mechanical recycling? What do you expect by 2030, and longer term, do you expect that to outgrow the market?
Yeah, I think when we look at if you look at what we put in the deck on polyethylene demand, you know, our view is that both mechanical recycling and advanced recycling are going to continue to grow. There's gonna be demand drivers to grow, you know, all of those segments. We're in the middle of discussions on a global plastics treaty right now. We've got a big conference in Ottawa at the end of April, beginning of May. There's another one in Korea toward the end of the year.
And I think what's coalescing around the industry and also the consumer brand owners and some of the NGOs that we work with is a focus on Enhanced Producer Responsibility as part of it to drive circularity, focus on recycled content mandates, a focus on all forms of recycling and bio-based products that are made from waste or alternative feedstocks. And in some cases, like we have a project that's making bio-based materials from waste from corn production, corn stover that's used to convert into bio feedstocks. You're gonna see demand for all forms of that in place. We've got some capacity coming up in Europe, and we started there because the Enhanced Producer Responsibility schemes are there, some of the mandates are there, and the demand from the downstream is very strong.
That's coming, when you look around the states, in the United States, that's coming, in Canada, I think we're gonna see it come globally. So I feel that over time, you're gonna see more focus on low carbon, fossil approaches like we're doing with Alberta. So how can you make plastics from fossil fuels that have zero CO2 emissions? You're gonna see focus on advanced recycling and mechanical recycling, and all of the above. And we're just gonna place bets in different regions based on what the market demand dictates. Good uptake from the customers. We see good volume growth there. We see pricing ahead of virgin materials, and of course, virgin materials are relatively low right now.
We continue to work to get plants certified with ISCC PLUS, so that we can certify that recycled content for our, for our customers.
Your next question comes from a line of Kevin McCarthy from Vertical Research Partners. Your line is open.
Yes, good morning. Jim, on a year-to-date basis, we've seen polyethylene export prices rise by, let's say, $0.04-$0.05 a pound. I'm curious, as to what you think is driving that. Would you attribute that pattern to better demand or some of the logistics challenges that have emerged in the Red Sea or, or perhaps other factors? And then maybe as a related question, if you don't have any unplanned outages, how hard do you think you might be able to run your US Gulf Coast, you know, ethylene-linked assets in the first quarter? Just trying to get a sense of whether the export market might be strong enough to lift up the US domestic market.
Yeah, good question, Kevin. I would say if you look back at 2023, in the first half of the year, really, the limit on PE export volumes and prices were just more on the volume side, on the supply chain side. It was the ability to get marine packed cargo moving. That improved considerably as we worked through the year. In fact, December was one of the highest months of the year for PE export sales, and we've got the export channel full and lined up. And overall, you know, we're running Canada, United States, Argentina, as hard as we can. You know, we ran at rates on crackers above 90% for back part of the year, especially in fourth quarter.
And so to your point, unconstrained, if there's no freeze impact or anything else, we're gonna be running them hard. The arbitrage is open. The volumes are there. We had up double-digit volumes for the year in plastics going to China. We actually were up year-over-year in China on PNSP, as well as Industrial Solutions, and I think a little bit in coatings, Consumer Solutions, I'm sorry, in Consumer Solutions. So we were off in Industrial Solutions because of the Plaquemine outage, but we were up in, slightly up in PU, slightly up in Consumer Solutions, and up double digits in PNSP. So I think the market is there, and that is, you know, everybody's talking about China being relatively light GDP last year, and we can move those kind of volumes.
My expectations are taking actions that are gonna help 2024 be better. As we do the walk on 2024 for the full year EBITDA walk, we've got about $300 million of margin expansion. So we started with $5.4 billion in 2023 of EBITDA. We have about $300 million from margin expansion. We've got about $800 million from volume growth. It's in all three segments. We've got turnarounds, which cost us $200 million, and then we've got about $100 million of improvement from equity earnings in the JVs. So net-net, you know, you're walking it up to the $6.4-$6.5 kind of a range for 2024. And I think with soft landing scenario in the United States, that'll help domestic market. We saw good domestic volume in PE as well here.
Your next question comes from the line of Frank Mitsch from Fermium Research. Your line is open.
Good morning, and, Jeff, nice to hear your voice again. Hey, Jim, really appreciate that walk up into 2024. I want to take a step back to Slide 7, where you talked about the projects mid-cycle that started up in 2022, should contribute $400 million. The projects that started up in 2023 should contribute another $400 million. Can you just look at those $800 million worth of mid-cycle earnings and suggest what you're anticipating they're gonna contribute in 2024?
Yeah, I think Frank, you know, I think coming back to that, and I probably didn't answer what Vince was asking very well, at the beginning. You know, I think you're probably looking back half of this year to 2025 before you'd start to see mid-cycle types of returns. We're not, we're not to mid-cycle yet. I mean, obviously, we're navigating the bottom here. But I think with interest rates potentially coming off in the first half of the year, some amount, that stimulates some demand and mid-cycle probably get there. So maybe $300 million-$400 million of that, you'll see in 2024, the balance into 2025.
Your next question comes from the line of Duffy Fischer from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Yeah, good morning. If you could, just on the $50 million-$100 million on the equity income improvement, can you walk through your major JVs and just kinda say what's additive, what's subtractive from that number?
Yeah, sure. I, you know, I think you're gonna see on the, you know, the Sadara JVs, year-over-year should be up, I don't know, say, about $100 million. Remember, they had some outages in the first part of the year, so they had some volume impact in the first part of the year. And obviously, they're seeing the same improvements in arbitrage that, we're seeing out of the US Gulf Coast. You're gonna see, Kuwait JVs up about $60 million. Obviously, that's the strength on ethylene glycol. We saw a bit of that in the fourth quarter and their ability to run hard as well. I think the Thai JVs will be down.
There's a lot of pressure, obviously on naphtha cracking, and they're based on naphtha cracking, so I expect them to be down about $20 million, and then everything else down about $30 million. So net-net, you're up about $100 million.
... Your next question comes from the line of John Roberts from Mizuho. Your line is open.
Thanks, and it looks like a pretty smooth transition in finance, so congratulations on the stability there. I believe you were considering some additional infrastructure divestments. Could you give us an update on that?
Sure, and, nice to hear your voice on the call, John. Welcome back. Yeah, we've got a number of non-product-producing infrastructure assets that we continue to evaluate. We have in flight for this year, greater than $1 billion, I said, same, I think maybe even greater than $1.5 billion of additional cash proceeds, from transactions related to that. We had a very successful, divestiture in 2020 of our rail and marine infrastructure assets, and that is working well. And, and the idea with there was to liberate some cash, but keep a competitive cost structure, and that same, mindset is in place here. And we think, you know, obviously, the cash proceeds are gonna help us with reinvesting in revenue-generating assets like the Alberta project as we move forward.
And then the other, you know, cash-related, kind of unique levers to Dow for the year is we've got, you know, the last, part of the settlement from the NOVA litigation, which should wind all that up, and that's about $500 million for the year. So I'd, I'd say net-net, you know, we're pushing north of $150 million+ the, the NOVA litigation to try to get those kind of unique cash levers into the company. Anything else you want to add, Jeff?
Yeah, Jim, the only other thing, and good morning, John, and thank you. The only other thing I would add is the working capital, structural working capital improvement opportunities that we'll continue to focus on. On it, if you recall, we reduced eight days and made eight days of improvement around our cash conversion cycle since then. So tremendous work across Team Dow, and we're gonna look to continue to get at least another one to two days of improvements out of that, which should also give us another unique to Dow cash lever.
Great. Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Patrick Cunningham from Citigroup. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning. So you mentioned Q2 and Q1. You mentioned, you know, turnarounds, you know, maybe weighted toward the first quarter, Plaquemine coming back in 2Q, you know, Freeport bringing on the increase in MDI distillation. Should we expect, you know, more significant sequential earnings improvement throughout the year and maybe help size where we can exit the year for the segment? And if you could also just briefly comment on what's driving the direction of MDI and MEG spreads into 1Q, that'd be great. Thanks.
Yeah. I think, I think generically that's, that's true, Patrick, that I think you'll see that build through the year. First quarter, obviously, we mentioned the turnaround, but second quarter, we expect to get glycol 2 back in Plaquemine, that'll be positive, and then third quarter will be more positive, so we'll ramp into the back half of the year. On isocyanates, the obviously the biggest driver is on construction-related and durable goods related markets. Obviously, there's some impact in automotive as well. Any, any of the rigids is where most of that volume gets consumed. So as that, those volumes start to pick up, you'll start to see MDI take off, and, and that's usually a, a driver of value across the entire portfolio, both the, the polyols and the, the MDI side of things.
So I'm hoping that we start to stimulate some of that demand in the back half of the year. And I think with what China's doing, in the markets, in the financial markets, to try to stimulate some things, could be between US interest rates and what's going on in China, that we see some momentum build in the back half of this year.
Your next question comes from the line of Mike Leithead from Barclays. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you. Good morning. Two questions on your Sadara joint venture. First, I believe there was a report earlier this month that Aramco is raising feedstock prices. Will that impact Sadara, or should we expect input costs there to remain relatively flat? And second, EBITDA remains quite depressed right now relative to net debt at the JV. Should we expect any further restructuring or, or cash infusion needed over the next year or so? Or, is the runway there sufficient to get back to, say, more mid-cycle type EBITDA levels?
Yeah, it's a good question. We've had no cash contributions that needed to be made to Sadara 2021, 2022, 2023. I'm not expecting any going forward. Sadara itself, like us, when you're navigating the bottom of the cycle, is focusing on self-help actions to try to pull levers to keep costs down. There is talk in the kingdom about a raise in feedstock prices, and so we'll obviously have to look at things that we can do within Sadara to offset those costs. But those haven't taken hold just yet. And then obviously, the market comes back. You know, Sadara is very levered to oil price, and so oil clears the market for plastics, especially because that drives the Asia-Pacific operating prices and costs.
And so when oil price comes up, which the expectations are, that that's gonna be constructive as we move into 2025 and, and beyond. There hasn't been a lot of investment in oil production. Demand for oil is back above where we were pre-pandemic. And yet we have big parts of the market that are not back above where we were pre-pandemic. So I think the outlook for demand is that the demand is going to come as the global markets improve, but the supply is going to lag. And so when we're sitting here at $80 oil, that could firm up. You could start to see the top end of oil, you know, be pitched more toward $90-$100 as you get into the 2025, 2026-time frame. And that has a pretty substantial impact to the bottom line in Sadara.
So near term, we're going to navigate our costs at Sadara to keep the costs down and to be able to handle those feedstock costs. Longer term, obviously lean into the market as the economy improves.
Your next question comes from the line of Aleksey Yefremov from KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Jim, you just made a couple of comments that siloxanes capacity could be absorbed by demand growth, and to me, you sound a little more positive here than in the past. But do you think the upstream silicones market could see margin uplift maybe within the next 12 months, or is this a longer-term project?
Yeah, if you look at the amount of capacity that's coming on in 2024 versus what came on in 2023, it's down quite a bit. You've got a couple of projects. There's four projects in China that are coming on, and I think a couple of them could delay beyond 2024. The downstream markets have been continuing to grow, and we've been continuing to invest in debottlenecking. It's just the amount of upstream that's come on has added to that. The other positive that's happened is obviously, silicon metal prices have come down too, and so that helps on the input side of things. So I think you're gonna see that, you know, as the downstream demand continues to improve and as the global economy continues to improve, we're gonna see that, as the project pipeline for buildings continues to grow.
And, and remember, this goes into everything. It can go into high-rise buildings, it can go into new airports, it can go into schools and all kinds of other construction. Those are big volume pools. I think as you start to see construction activity pick up, and then you're gonna see that ramp. We're seeing strong demand in areas. Obviously, EVs were a big part of it. 5G and connectivity is a big part of it. Data centers, so as you're looking at things like how to handle cooling on data centers, silicone fluids are dielectrics, and some immersive cooling applications in data centers, which are big energy hogs and, and need energy efficiency. That's a growth area for us as well. And then the normal downstream demand in consumer goods and beauty care products continues to be good.
I'm optimistic. You know, maybe it may take more into late 2024 and into 2025 to see it, but I do feel like we're gonna start to move toward mid-cycle in 2025.
Your next question comes from the line of Arun Viswanathan from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Great. Thanks for taking my question. So that's a good segue actually, to what I was thinking about was, you know, if you think about the guidance that you're issuing here for Q1, it looks to be in the $1.3 billion or so level for EBITDA, give or take a little bit. But, annualizing that will get you to $5.2 billion, you know, and then maybe add in a little bit for seasonality, it gets you to closer to $6 billion. Would you consider that kind of trough-like conditions? And as you move through the year in 2024, what are some of the things that makes you excited that we could, you know, maybe achieve, mid-cycle, by when you're exiting the year?
And I guess maybe if you can just comment on what your expectations are for China growth going forward? Obviously, we'll likely see a, maybe a slower growth environment for the next four or five years versus the last four or five years. Just wanted to get your thoughts on that as well. Thanks.
Yeah, I think that, you know, the things that are constraining to me as we're moving forward is no new capacity coming in in plastics and packaging and specialty plastics. You've got high operating rates in all the cost-advantaged regions of the world, and you've got export arbitrage window open to China, as I mentioned, double-digit growth for us in China, and I, and I think our view is we're able to move, continue to move products. India has been strong, so we're moving product into India. Mexico has been really strong. We supply a lot of plastics to Mexico by rail. I think that's all positive.
I would say, you know, our view in the Americas, our view in Asia-Pacific is China comes back, you know, so will the rest of Asia-Pacific, and then our view in Europe is a bit mixed. Energy cost is better in Europe, which I think in the short term helps. It's not as big a drag as it was, but I think longer term, you know, Europe's got some structural issues if we can't get energy costs down even lower. It puts a big weight on the consumer, which puts a big weight on demand, but puts additional weight on the industrial economy. So fortunately, we've got some cost-advantaged positions there that help us, and I think we'll navigate through that.
Back half of the year, you know, we've got Industrial Solutions coming back to full strength. We've got our new projects coming on that I just mentioned, $300 million-$400 million from that. You know, that's all in that, volume growth number that I talked about. And then margin expansions, just the oil to gas spread on our existing business and the strength that we're gonna see in some pricing and polyethylene for the year. So I think we're gonna ramp in, to 2025, get ourselves kinda back onto a, a mid-cycle run- rate. And, you know, we're gonna. Well, in the meantime, we're gonna pull the levers like we've been doing to manage cash, keep the balance sheet strong, be the first mover in the next wave with the Alberta project, just like we were with Texas-9.
This is the right time to do it. This is the time to lock in the low cost for construction, and we're ready to roll.
This ends our question- and- answer session. I will now turn the call back over to Mr. Gupta for closing remarks.
Yeah, thanks, Rob. Thank you everyone for joining our call, and we appreciate your interest in Dow. For your reference, a copy of our transcript will be posted on Dow's website within approximately 48 hours. This concludes our call. Thank you again.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.