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The origins of the petrochemical industry can be traced back to the
1920s when simple organic chemicals such as ethanol and isopropanol
were first prepared on an industrial scale from by-products
(ethylene and propylene) of oil refining. This oil-based
petrochemical industry, with lower olefms and aromatics as the key
building blocks, rapidly developed into the enormous industry it is
today. A multitude of products that are indispensible to modern day
society, from plastics to pharmaceuticals, are derived from oil and
natural gas-based hydro carbons. The industry had its heyday in the
'50s and '60s when predictions of future growth rates tended to be
exponential curves. However, two developments that took place in
the early '70s disturbed this simplistic and optimistic view of the
future. Firstly, the publication of the report for the Cub of Rome
on the 'Limits to Growth' emphasized the finite nature of
non-renewable fossil fuel resources. Secondly, the Oil Crisis of
1973 emphasized the vulnerability of an energy and chemicals
industry that is based largely on a single raw material."
The origins of the petrochemical industry can be traced back to the
1920s when simple organic chemicals such as ethanol and isopropanol
were first prepared on an industrial scale from by-products
(ethylene and propylene) of oil refining. This oil-based
petrochemical industry, with lower olefms and aromatics as the key
building blocks, rapidly developed into the enormous industry it is
today. A multitude of products that are indispensible to modern day
society, from plastics to pharmaceuticals, are derived from oil and
natural gas-based hydro carbons. The industry had its heyday in the
'50s and '60s when predictions of future growth rates tended to be
exponential curves. However, two developments that took place in
the early '70s disturbed this simplistic and optimistic view of the
future. Firstly, the publication of the report for the Cub of Rome
on the 'Limits to Growth' emphasized the finite nature of
non-renewable fossil fuel resources. Secondly, the Oil Crisis of
1973 emphasized the vulnerability of an energy and chemicals
industry that is based largely on a single raw material."
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