Farms.com Home   News

Nutrien’s decision to build U.S. export terminal made to meet potash demand

Agricultural product provider Nutrien’s decision this week to build a US$1-billion potash export terminal in Longview, Washington, rather than in Canada was made to “meet rising demand for Saskatchewan-made potash,” according to a report by Reuters.

The news agency said the the Saskatoon-based company expects to make a final investment decision on the idea in 2027. Previously Nutrien said it was considering Canadian locations as well.

In a statement on Friday, the company said it was focused on ensuring Canadian potash continues to meet rising global demand in the most competitive way possible.

“We assess major projects against a disciplined set of operational, commercial, and financial criteria that reflect a multi-decade time horizon,” the company said.

When asked about reports that federal Transport Minister Steven MacKinnon had requested meetings to persuade them to reconsider the company said: “We meet regularly with government and lines of communication remain open.”

Earlier this month Nutien said it was undertaking a strategic review of its phosphate business and the review could result in reconfiguring of operations, strategic partnerships or a sale.

The company said at the time it intends to “solidify the optimal path” for the division next year.

Nutrien is the second-largest producer of phosphate in North America, with two mines and four upgrade facilities in the United States.

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Here Comes El Nino, Mountain Weather Update 1/11, Meteorologist Chris Tomer

Video: Here Comes El Nino, Mountain Weather Update 1/11, Meteorologist Chris Tomer

We're already transitioning from La Nina to El Nino. Expect a full bore El Nino by May 2026 with global impacts. I also look at projected remaining Winter snowfall.