Peter Z. E. Vanacker
Management
Thank you, Michael, for your question. Let me go through the different segments. I mean, first of all, as we mentioned, we start already Q3 with that $85 million of improvements in O&P Americas from less downtime, and that is following the completion -- the successful completion of the Channelview turnaround. We also started Q3 in O&P Americas with improved polyethylene chain margins. Remember, the successful price increase that was implemented. And also, you may expect to see already the results out of our cash improvement plan in fixed cost reductions, that not just, of course, in O&P, but across, I mean, the portfolio. If I switch -- and then in O&P Americas, what we continue to see is we see a resilient packaging business. We see strong export demand. What we also start seeing actually is something that you saw in the pandemic as well is that consumer behavior is changing. So people are going less out for dinner or lunch in restaurants, but there is more consumption at home, which automatically also supports packaging business, packaging demand. If I shift gears, I mean, to the European region, also here, I mean, improved polymer chain results, favorable naphtha prices, still, I mean, a favorable exchange rate. We also will have, in addition to that, the operating rates increased because in Q2, we had in Wesseling, I mean, the large cracker [indiscernible]. We had an outage there. We had some operational constraints at that facility. So we believe that is now behind us. In the I&D business, yes, we don't expect,-- just like Aaron said in the prepared remarks, we don't expect, I mean, that margins would improve if you look at where crude is currently and where cracks are. Operating rates, I mean, 80%, which is a bit lower, but that is mainly related to a scheduled turnaround that we have in La Porte. And then on the other side, we also alluded to the fact that APS business and the technology business, Q3 over Q2 should be pretty much flat.