chemical · input

Energy-Absorbing Foam (EPS/EPP, Car Seat)

Expanded polystyrene/polypropylene foam that absorbs crash energy in car seats (and bike helmets). A safety-critical, single-use-in-a-crash material.

11

Source countries

4

Companies

1

Goods affected

0

Claims on record

What depends on it

Goods that need this input

1 essential American goods rely on energy-absorbing foam (eps/epp, car seat) somewhere upstream in their supply chain.

Where it comes from

Source countries

Share of global supply, by country.

Who makes it

Supplier companies

4 companies produce energy-absorbing foam (eps/epp, car seat).

BASF SE(BAS)

HQ DE

World's largest chemical company by revenue; dominant Western producer of food-grade sodium nitrite. BASF expanded sodium nitrite production capacity in Germany specifically to meet growing demand for high-purity pharmaceutical and food applications. Primary production at Ludwigshafen (world's largest contiguous chemical complex). Also produces sodium nitrite catalysts, sulfuric acid, and intermediates for pharmaceutical synthesis. BASF sells food-grade sodium nitrite to meat processors globally through distribution networks and third-party channels.

INEOS Styrolution

HQ DE

Third-largest ABS/styrenics maker (~1.35M t/a across 9 countries).

JSP Corporation(7942.T)

HQ JP

Leading maker of expanded polypropylene (EPP, brand Arpro) for automotive energy-absorption and seating.

Kaneka Corporation

HQ JP

Dominant maker of flame-retardant modacrylic fiber (Protex) — the core FR fiber in US mattress barrier socks and FR apparel.