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North American fertiliser producer Nutrien has suspended work on a planned low-carbon ammonia project in Geismar, Louisiana.
The firm said it has halted the work because estimated capital costs have increased and because of "continued uncertainty on the timing of emerging uses for clean ammonia". It said it is prioritising "other capital allocation alternatives".
Projected costs increased by "around 15-20pc" compared with initial estimates, Nutrien's president and chief executive Ken Seitz said today.
Nutrien had first announced plans to construct the facility at its existing Geismar complex in May 2022. It said at the time that it would be the "world's largest clean ammonia production facility" and estimated costs at around $2bn.
Nutrien had been aiming to take a final investment decision in 2023, with construction expected to begin in 2024 and "full production" to start in 2027. While the firm will continue to engage with partners on the technology and downstream side regarding the project and "evaluate opportunities", the decision to suspend the plans for now will mean a delay of "at least 24 months", Nutrien's president for nitrogen and phosphate Trevor Williams said today.
According to Seitz, Nutrien believes that "there will be an opportunity in the clean ammonia business in the future". But "the timing of the evolution of that demand is unknown," he said. And "today the evidence wouldn't be sufficient to justify the assumption of a premium, at least not in the near term, emerging for clean ammonia," Nutrien chief commercial officer Mark Thompson said.
Nutrien had planned for the facility to use natural gas autothermal reforming technology "to achieve at least a 90pc reduction in CO2 emissions" and that around 1.8mn t/yr of CO2 could be captured and stored in geological formations.
Provisions in the US' Inflation Reduction Act which sharply lift tax credits for sequestering CO2 provide "a big improvement in terms of being able to try and justify" projects like the one planned in Geismar, Williams said. But this still "didn't get [the firm] over the hurdle in terms of the economics of the project at this point," he said.
The firm had signed a preliminary agreement with Japanese conglomerate Mitsubishi for offtake of up to 40pc, or 480,000 t/yr of ammonia, from the plant for delivery "to the Asian fuel market, including Japan". This agreement "was not part of the decision-making progress" for suspending the project, Seitz said.
Nutrien's Geismar facility was one of several large sites targeting hydrogen and ammonia production from natural gas with carbon capture and storage or utilisation that have been announced across the US in recent years. As of early June, 11 out of 20 blue ammonia projects planned globally had been announced in the US — totalling 16.3mn t/yr out of nearly 26mn t/yr of potential capacity worldwide.