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Australia’s IPL to close Portland SSP plant

  • : Fertilizers
  • 19/04/02

Australia-headquartered fertilizer producer Incitec Pivot (IPL) will close its Portland, Victoria, single super phosphate (SSP) plant in May, following a strategic review.

Operations will be consolidated to the Geelong, Victoria SSP facility, around 300km to the east, but the Portland distribution centre will continue to operate as normal.

Portland produces 180,000 t/yr of SSP at capacity, while Geelong's output can reach 350,000 t/yr. A strategic review was initiated in 2014 to optimise the SSP assets, with the product facing overcapacity and competitively priced imports.

Sulphuric acid and phosphate rock are imported to Portland and Geelong, with demand for both to decline as a result of the Portland closure. Phosphate rock is imported from international suppliers, while sulphuric acid is sourced domestically from mining and metals firm Nyrstar's zinc smelter in Tasmania.

Drought and logistics cut sales

Dry weather across pasture, summer and winter cropping regions in eastern Australia cut IPL's fertilizer sales in the first half of the firm's 2019 financial year, ending 30 September, by around 200,000t from the same period a year earlier.

IPL does not expect to recover the volumes in the second half, with lower sales to result in a negative impact of around A$20mn ($14mn) for first-half financial year 2019 earnings before interest and tax (Ebit), the group said today.

Production and distribution from the Phosphate Hill, Queensland, plant continue to be affected by the closure of a flood-damaged rail line, which connects the plant to the Townsville port.

The rail line has partially re-opened between Richmond and Townsville and some alternative logistic arrangements have been made, but the disruption will have a negative impact of around A$60mn ($42mn) for first-half Ebit, and around A$100mn ($71mn) on full-year results.

Waggaman ammonia plant woes continue

IPL's Waggaman ammonia plant in the US Gulf coast state of Louisiana has been shut down since late March owing to a compressor controls issue, but is expected to resume full production in the second week of April.

The 800,000 t/yr capacity unit had only recently restarted following a prolonged outage in January-February owing to repairs on its CO2 removal system.

US direct application ammonia demand in the spring has been minimal because of persistent rain and rapid snow-melt, which has inundated fields and the domestic river system.

The shutdown is unlikely to have an immediate impact on the market, considering farmer demand has been minimal through March.

IPL has bought forward inspection and maintenance on the plant owing to the compressor controls issue and has deferred its next turnaround to October 2020 from October 2019.


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