Bangladeshi agency BCIC has issued a tender to buy 50,000t of granular urea, closing on 7 August.
Shipment is requested in two lots for delivery to Chittagong port. The first cargo is required to be loaded within 28 days of the opening of the l/c.
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Puede cancelar su suscripción a estas actualizaciones en cualquier momento. Argus gestiona la información personal de acuerdo con nuestra Política de privacidad.Bangladeshi agency BCIC has issued a tender to buy 50,000t of granular urea, closing on 7 August.
Shipment is requested in two lots for delivery to Chittagong port. The first cargo is required to be loaded within 28 days of the opening of the l/c.
London, 5 February (Argus) — Indian fertilizer importer and producer Hindustan Urvarak and Rasayan (Hurl) has issued a tender inviting producers and trading firms to enter a memorandum of understanding (MoU) for the supply of various fertilizers until 31 May 2027. The tender closes on 12 February. Hurl is seeking suppliers for the following products: DAP 18-46 NPK 10-26-26 NPS 20-20-0+13S NPK 12-32-16 NPK 15-15-15 MOP MAP 11-52 46pc TSP Hurl has not specified the total quantities of each product that it is seeking for the period. The firm will state its demand on a shipment-by-shipment basis, and suppliers with which Hurl has signed MoUs will be eligible to offer. Individual cargoes will be priced on a cfr basis. Hurl will want deliveries to ports on the east and west coasts of India. By Tom Hampson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
London, 5 February (Argus) — Abu Dhabi's state-owned Adnoc has set its February sulphur official selling price (OSP) for the Indian subcontinent at $530/t fob Ruwais, up by $10/t from its January OSP. Adnoc's February OSP implies a delivered price of $546-548/t cfr India, with the freight cost for a 40,000-45,000t shipment to the east-coast of India last assessed at $16-18/t on 29 January. By Maria Mosquera Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Tokyo, 5 February (Argus) — Japanese engineering companies Kanadevia and Nippon Steel Engineering agreed to explore merging their businesses to meet future demand growth for waste management and waste-to-energy plants. Kanadevia and Nippon Steel's wholly owned subsidiary Nippon Steel Engineering signed the initial agreement on 5 February to explore a possible merger by April 2027. The companies aim to finalise their decision by November 2026. Kanadevia and Nippon Steel Engineering expect demand for waste management plants in Japan to grow because of the many domestic plants that are ageing, which will require renewal. The companies also forecast a rise in demand for waste-to-energy plants overseas — especially in growing markets like north America and southeast Asia — given the drive towards decarbonisation. Kanadevia has expanded its decarbonisation businesses, including to waste-to-energy plants and hydrogen- and ammonia-related products. Kanadevia's Switzerland-based green technology subsidiary Kanadevia Inova added 11 UK biogas plants to its portfolio after buying low-carbon asset management firm Iona Capital. Kanadevia plans to start commercial operations of its plant, which will produce polymer-electrolyte-membrane water electrolyser stacks , in the April 2028-March 2029 fiscal year. It also plans to invest in building production facilities for ammonia-fuelled ship engines , aiming to begin operations in 2028-29. Kanadevia will sell 25pc of its stake in its subsidiary Hitachi Zosen Marine Engine by the end of March 2026. Kanadevia expects to own 40pc, while Japan's major shipbuilder Imabari Shipbuilding will raise its share from 35pc to 60pc after the sale. The move is intended to speed up the development of ammonia-fuelled ship engines by allowing Imabari Shipbuilding to lead the project. By Nanami Oki Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
London, 4 February (Argus) — A trading firm sold 25,000t of Russian MAP and 15,000t of DAP for shipment to Latin America, excluding Brazil, while a fresh Moroccan MAP sale to Brazil has also emerged. The Russian MAP sold at $700/t fob Baltics and the DAP at $690/t fob, both for shipment in March. The cargoes are sold on a fob basis for a long position and are not sold on a cfr basis to importers. The exact destination of products is not known but Argentina is a likely destination. The prices would net forward to around $750/t cfr and to around $740/t cfr Argentina for the MAP and DAP, respectively. DAP/MAP offers to Argentina have firmed to $750-765/t cfr. The Moroccan MAP sold to Brazil at $720/t cfr and will load in February-March. The total quantity is unknown. Suppliers also remain bullish on TSP and SSP. TSP offers to Brazil have increased to $575-600/t cfr, with Moroccan at the high end, while SSP suppliers are targeting higher sales. Phosphate prices in the Americas have firmed earlier than normal because of expectations of reduced Chinese phosphate exports this half of the year, while raw material costs continue to rise. These factors have pushed importers in the US, Brazil and Argentina back into the market at the same time, exacerbating the firmer trend and lifting DAP/MAP prices since the start of the year. But distributors in the domestic markets still point to poor farmer affordability as crop prices remain low. By Adrien Seewald Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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