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South Korean firms plan Queensland ammonia, H2 exports

  • Spanish Market: Fertilizers, Hydrogen
  • 21/09/22

A consortium of South Korean firms have set up a venture in Australia's Queensland state to develop a supply chain to ship more than 1mn t/yr of green ammonia from Australia to South Korea in 2032.

The group comprises mining firm Korea Zinc and its Australia-based subsidiary Ark Energy and conglomerates Hanwha Impact and SK Gas. The partners plan to build upon Ark Energy's Collinsville green energy hub, which plans to develop 3,000MW of renewable energy, said Queensland energy minister Mick de Brenni.

Korea Zinc already has a presence in northern Queensland through its 100pc owned Sun Metals zinc refinery in Townsville, which Korea Zinc plans to operate fully on renewable energy by 2040 and on 80pc renewable energy by 2030. The firm set up Ark Energy in 2021 to help the refinery with its energy transition. Ark Energy has set up the SunHQ hydrogen hub powered by a 124MW solar farm that will power the zinc refinery.

The consortium brings together three major firms in South Korea's hydrogen economy that have a forecast demand for more than 2mn t/yr of green ammonia from 2030, said Korea Zinc vice-chairman Yun B Choi. "We look forward to working with our partners to unlock Australia's potential to become a large-scale producer and exporter of green hydrogen and its derivatives including green ammonia," said Choi.

The latest venture follows the signing last year by Korea Zinc with Townsville port about exporting 120,000t of renewable hydrogen to South Korea from the port.

The Queensland government is keen to promote the state as a potential exporter of green hydrogen and green ammonia. The state launched a A$2bn ($1.34bn) fund to finance renewable energy and hydrogen projects given its potential as a significant producer of solar energy.

Queensland has around 28 projects in the planning stage to produce hydrogen and/or ammonia, largely from renewable energy. South Korean and Japanese firms have been the most active foreign investors in Australia-based hydrogen projects, as both countries have limited capacity to produce green hydrogen and both seek pathways to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.


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17/06/25

Australia backs expanded NeoSmelt green iron group

Australia backs expanded NeoSmelt green iron group

Sydney, 17 June (Argus) — The Australian government has awarded domestic green iron consortium NeoSmelt — comprising five major metals and energy producers — a A$19.8mn ($13mn) grant to support its development of an electric smelter in Western Australia. The grant will support the project's A$48.8mn engineering study, Australian climate change and energy minister Chris Bowen said today. NeoSmelt will make a final investment decision on the project next year. It expects to produce 30,000-40,000 t/yr of low-carbon direct reduction iron at the plant from 2028. The consortium will initially power the site using natural gas, but may later transition to renewable hydrogen. NeoSmelt includes many of Australia's largest resource producers. Its founding members are Australian metals producers BlueScope Steel and BHP, and UK-Australian metals producer Rio Tinto. Japanese producer Mitsui and Australian energy producer Woodside Energy joined the consortium today, BlueScope chief executive for Australian steel products Tania Archibald said in a statement announcing the grant. The Australian government will also support the project through its A$14bn green hydrogen subsidy scheme , which will enable producers to claim tax credits worth A$2/t of low-carbon hydrogen produced from 2027. It is also supporting other low-carbon iron producers through its A$1bn green iron investment fund , which is designed to support early-stage projects and attract private-sector investment. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US Senate bill would repeal H2 incentive by year end


16/06/25
16/06/25

US Senate bill would repeal H2 incentive by year end

Houston, 16 June (Argus) — The US Senate Finance Committee is proposing to abolish the hydrogen production tax incentive at the end of the year, delivering a fresh blow to industry efforts to preserve the credit until 2029. The Senate bill text released late Monday terminates 45V on 1 January 2026, moving its expiration up from 2033 as originally written during former president Joe Biden's administration. The tax-writing committee opted to retain the language pertaining to 45V passed by the Republican-controlled House of Representatives last month. Elsewhere in the text, the Senate proposed an extended phase out of other clean energy tax credits, including solar, wind, nuclear and geothermal. Clean energy advocates and fossil fuel proponents both lobbied the Senate to extend 45V's expiration date to 2029, which would have brought the credit in line with other renewable energy incentives that will expire closer to the end of the decade. If the Senate passes the bill as it is written, the vast majority of planned clean hydrogen projects are expected to be abandoned. Only facilities that begin construction before 31 December will be able to access the incentive. However, many companies with clean hydrogen projects in the pipeline held off from making final investment decisions while the previous administration debated the final requirements for 45V. Hydrogen proponents say the timeline between now and the end of the year is likely too narrow for most projects to take off. Only a few companies have said they expect to be able to begin construction by the end of this year. By Jasmina Kelemen Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Bangladesh’s BCIC seeks phosphoric acid in tender


16/06/25
16/06/25

Bangladesh’s BCIC seeks phosphoric acid in tender

London, 16 June (Argus) — State-owned Bangladeshi fertilizer producer and importer BCIC has issued a tender to buy 20,000t of phosphoric acid, closing on 4 August. BCIC is seeking offers for merchant-grade 52-54pc P2O5 acid for shipment to Chattogram. It wants the sale to be competed within 45 days from receiving the letter of credit. BCIC will close tenders to buy 10,000t and 20,000t of phosphoric acid on 17 June and 30 June, respectively. By Tom Hampson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Pupuk Indonesia distributes subsidised fertilizers


16/06/25
16/06/25

Pupuk Indonesia distributes subsidised fertilizers

Singapore, 16 June (Argus) — State-owned fertilizer producer Pupuk Indonesia has distributed about 3.24mn t of subsidised fertilizers to registered domestic farmers as of 9 June, the company said. The distributed volumes consist of 1.55mn t of urea, 1.57mn t of NPK fertilizers, 25,500t of specialised NPK formulas and 98,600t of Pupuk's Petroganik organic fertilizers. Pupuk Indonesia's current national fertilizer stock availability for the domestic market is around 2mn t, comprising subsidised and non-subsidised products. Subsidised fertilizer stocks amount to 1.37mn t and non-subsidised fertilizer stocks are at 680,000t. Pupuk Indonesia has set a highest retail price (HET) for the sale of subsidised fertilizers. The HET for urea fertilizers is set at 2,250 rupiahs/kg ($138/t), for NPK Phonska fertilizers it is at 2,300 rupiahs/kg ($141/t), for NPK fertilizers for cocoa it is at 3,300 rupiahs/kg ($203/t), and for organic fertilizers it is at 800 rupiahs/kg ($49/t). Pupuk Indonesia is widely expected to have around 150,000t of urea available for July-loading export, according to market participants, but no tender has emerged yet. By Dinise Chng Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

UK’s spending review gives little clarity for H2


13/06/25
13/06/25

UK’s spending review gives little clarity for H2

London, 13 June (Argus) — The UK committed £500mn ($680mn) for hydrogen infrastructure today, but gave few details about how the funds will work in practice. UK hydrogen market participants had hoped for more information from the government's multi-year spending announcement this week. But London's energy plans focused on expanding nuclear power and its second wave of carbon capture and storage (CCS). The funding for CCS in Scotland and eastern England's Humber region appeared to cover studies at this stage and investment decisions are probably years away. The UK said the £500mn would support its "first regional hydrogen transport and storage network", but it has not chosen the location and did not specify the mechanism to give funds. London has promised to launch subsidy schemes for hydrogen transport and storage infrastructure projects in 2025, but the government would not answer Argus ' question if the funding was for these. On hydrogen supply, the UK said it aims to award contracts in the second round of its subsidy competition for electrolysis projects by the first quarter of 2026. London must narrow down from the 27 projects it shortlisted in April. Progress on CCS facilities could eventually unlock more CCS-based hydrogen production, the government said, but it gave no firm detail. The Humber region's "Viking" project has no CCS-based hydrogen plant among its first users. Scotland's Acorn cluster had proponents for at least two CCS-enabled hydrogen plants, but there has been virtually no update on these from the proponents since 2022. Acorn's developers Storegga, Shell, and Harbour Energy would not give Argus an update on the status of hydrogen production linked to Acorn. Separately, the UK recognised a proposed 50km hydrogen pipeline in the Humber region as being of "national significance". This should streamline approvals and decision-making under the secretary of state. The pipeline, proposed by Norway's Equinor, would link future hydrogen storage with production from Equinor at Saltend chemical park, Centrica at the Easington gas terminal and production projects south of the Humber. Equinor targets 2027 for its application, which might allow the company to start building from 2028-29, but this probably hinges on the UK subsidising the region's production plans and sorting out the UK pipeline subsidy scheme. The UK is expected to set out more detail for hydrogen in its 10-year infrastructure strategy and its industrial strategy, due next week and at the end of June, respectively, market participants said. London will also issue its half-yearly "update to the market" sometime this summer and update its hydrogen strategy in the autumn, it has said. By Aidan Lea Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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