Fresh ammonia production in the US Gulf coast will support domestic demand during the spring and could impact global pricing, with new output likely creating a surplus during the first quarter of 2026.
In Texas City, Texas, the 1.2mn metric tonne (t)/yr Gulf Coast Ammonia (GCA) plant began increasing production in November and loaded a cargo, setting soft expectations that the facility will be ready for commercial operations in the first quarter of 2026.
Meanwhile, Woodside Energy's 1.1mn t/yr facility in Beaumont, Texas, is expected to ramp up output before the end of 2025 and begin commercial output in early 2026. The supply expansion could keep domestic prices in check, despite historically elevated corn acreage expectations for spring 2026 and the continued outage at Canada-based fertilizer producer Nutrien's Trinidad plant.
The US Department of Agriculture's (USDA) forecast of 95mn acres of corn to be planted this spring was on the high end of market expectations, which will support domestic nitrogen fertilizer use. That is down by about 5pc from 2025/2026 corn acreage, which the USDA estimated at 98.7mn acres, but up from 91.5mn acres in 2024/2025.
The potential for expanding output has already begun to apply pressure on ammonia prices. The December Tampa settlement was unchanged from November at $650/t cfr Tampa, marking the end of five consecutive monthly increases since the June settlement.
Despite no formal update from Nutrien regarding output from its 2.2mn t/yr facility in Trinidad, ammonia markets west of the Suez Canal are already facing pressure from a lull in demand from importers.
In addition to new production coming online, there are concerns in the market that the new European Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) could erode US export viability in the near-term.
The European Commission revised US producers' default emissions value in early December, raising the value from 2t of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) to 3.41t CO2e due to two inland plants utilizing petroleum coke as a feedstock rather than natural gas. The increased base CO2e value could make importers hesitant to accept US ammonia in the near-term. But with revisions and possible delays to the implementation of CBAM regulations, the overall impact to US ammonia exports remains unclear.
Producers in the US Gulf coast have exported more than 1.1mn t so far in 2025, according to Argus data, with that total expected to increase in 2026 with the new capacity coming online.

