chemical · input

Potassium Hydroxide (KOH)

Concentrated aqueous KOH solution (35–40%) used as the alkaline electrolyte. Preferred over NaOH for higher ionic conductivity. Also used in NiMH batteries. Produced via chlor-alkali electrolysis of potassium chloride.

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Source countries

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Companies

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Goods affected

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Claims on record

What depends on it

Goods that need this input

1 essential American goods rely on potassium hydroxide (koh) 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 potassium hydroxide (koh).

OxyChem (Occidental Chemical Corporation)

HQ US25% share

Wholly owned chemical subsidiary of Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY, HQ Dallas TX); one of the largest US PVC resin manufacturers, primarily from the Battleground Manufacturing Complex in La Marque (near Texas City), Texas. OxyChem is also one of the largest US chlorine and caustic soda (chlor-alkali) producers, operating in Texas, Louisiana, and Tennessee. OxyChem's PVC resin production is vertically integrated with its chlor-alkali operations — it produces its own chlorine and VCM. The Battleground complex sits on the Houston Ship Channel corridor, approximately 25 miles southeast of Houston, within the densest concentration of US chemical manufacturing. OxyChem's parent Occidental Petroleum carries significant upstream oil and gas exposure, creating financial linkage between crude oil prices and OxyChem's capital spending priorities for chlor-alkali and PVC assets.

INEOS Group

HQ CH15% share

British privately held petrochemicals company (HQ Rolle, Switzerland; operations HQ London); major European KOH producer via chlor-alkali at Runcorn, UK (one of Europe's largest chlor-alkali complexes), Köln Germany, and other sites. INEOS is also the primary European source of chlorine for PVC production and the largest private employer in Scotland (North Sea). INEOS founder Sir Jim Ratcliffe acquired British cycling team INEOS Grenadiers and Manchester United Football Club — the same company that makes the KOH in European alkaline batteries also owns one of the world's most prominent cycling teams.

Olin Corporation(OLN)

HQ US15% share

US chlor-alkali and VCM producer (NYSE: OLN, HQ Stamford CT; ~$6B revenue); the largest US chlorine producer and a major feedstock supplier to the PVC resin industry. Olin does not directly produce PVC resin but produces the chlorine and vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) that PVC resin manufacturers (Westlake, Shintech, OxyChem) depend on. Olin's chlor-alkali operations in Freeport TX (the largest chlorine plant in the US), McIntosh AL, Niagara Falls NY, and other sites collectively make Olin the critical upstream enabler of the US PVC supply chain. Olin also owns Winchester ammunition — meaning the same company that produces the chlorine input for PVC pipe also manufactures rifle and shotgun ammunition, a striking dual-use combination under one NYSE ticker. Olin's chlorine pricing directly sets the economics for US PVC resin production.

Nutrien Ltd. (Potash / KCl feedstock)

HQ CA3% share

Canadian agricultural company (NYSE/TSX: NTR, HQ Saskatoon Saskatchewan); world's largest potash (KCl) producer — the raw material feedstock for KOH production via chlor-alkali electrolysis. Nutrien operates 6 potash mines in Saskatchewan producing ~14 million tonnes KCl/year (~20% of global supply). Potash is primarily used as a fertilizer (57% of global crop nutrition comes from potash); the KOH battery electrolyte market is a tiny fraction of total potash demand. The same Saskatchewan mine shaft that produces fertilizer for global agriculture also provides the KCl that becomes the KOH electrolyte in every alkaline battery.