Grade B
ChemScore report card 2024

SABIC

About the company

Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) is a Saudi Arabian multinational chemical manufacturing company. The company is part of the state-owned petroleum and natural gas company Saudi Aramco, which owns 70% of its shares. SABIC manufactures petrochemicals, chemicals, industrial polymers, fertilizers, and metals.
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Total score
29 out of 48 points
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Product Portfolio
8 out of 18 points

To reach a final score in this category, we assess the company’s transparency in chemical production. Lower transparency makes it harder to achieve a good score. If the product portfolio transparency is very low, a company producing just one or even zero toxic chemicals (according to available data) might receive the same poor score as one producing 50.

Visit the methodology to delve deeper into the ChemScore ranking.

Number of registered hazardous chemicals 24
Number of chemicals on the EU’s Candidate List 5
Number of chemicals on the EU’s Authorisation List and/or POP substances 2
Number of persistent chemicals 1
Product portfolio transparency 100%
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Development of Safer Chemicals
9 out of 12 points
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Management & Transparency
8 out of 12 points
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Lack of Controversies
4 out of 6 points

Action points 🔍

1. Increase transparency

Sabic has disclosed its full chemicals portfolio, including production volumes and locations. This is a great start. To further enhance transparency, the company should also disclose the share of revenue and production volumes of products that contain hazardous chemicals, including Substances of Concern (SoCs).

2. Map and phase out persistent chemicals

SABIC is responsible for placing at least one persistent chemical on the US/EU market, where all or most are PFAS substances. The risks linked to these “forever chemicals” are becoming increasingly clear, not only for human health and the environment, but also for companies and their shareholders. The regulatory tightening, high-profile lawsuits, and rising consumer awareness make business models based on persistent chemicals increasingly risky. SABIC should first identify all uses and the share of total revenue derived from products that are or contain persistent substances. Then, the company should publish a time-bound plan to phase out persistent chemicals from each product group or business segment. Sika and LyondellBasell have both published the share of revenue that is generated from products containing PFAS. 3M has also published those numbers and committed to exiting the manufacture of PFAS by 2025.

3. Develop safer solutions

SABIC currently lacks a strict policy for limiting hazardous chemicals in its new product development. As a result, both its existing and future product lines are dependent on substances that run the risk of becoming regulated. Therefore, SABIC may face growing challenges in maintaining profitability in the long term. The company should set a 2030 target for the share of revenue generated by products free from hazardous chemicals and develop a strategy to achieve it. A first step should be to, similarly to Lanxess, publicly state that it will not develop or market new end-products containing more than 0.1% of substances that have the characteristics of a Substance of Very High Concern (SVHCs).

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Company facts
Founded
1976
Headquarters
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Revenue
37.7 billion USD
Market capitalization
66.7 billion USD
ISIN
SA0007879121
Category
Basic
Other
Plastic & Rubber & Fibres
Other years
Year Rank Total score
2024 2 / 51 29 / 48
2023 1 / 50 31 / 48
2022 12 / 54 18 / 48
2021 22 / 50 13 / 48
2020 23 / 35 12 / 48