Vancouver Sun

Slim sales in India behind potash buildup, Agrium boss says

- BY ROD NICKEL

WINNIPEG — A dramatic buildup in North American potash inventorie­s is largely due to a lack of sales to India, but the situation will not last long term, the CEO of Agrium Inc. said on Friday.

Stockpiles of potassium chloride — a key crop nutrient more commonly known as potash — climbed last month to 3 million tonnes, up 3.9 per cent from April and up 43 per cent from the five- year average, according to data released by Potash Corporatio­n of Saskatchew­an on Thursday.

“I think it’s just reflecting India not pulling [ potash],” Agrium CEO Mike Wilson told Reuters in an interview. “Once India starts to pull, and assuming we settle with China, everything should be fine.”

Agrium, based in Calgary, is a major producer of nitrogen and potash fertilizer­s, and is the largest U. S. retail seller of products like seed, chemicals and fertilizer to farmers.

India is one of the biggest consumers of potash, and a new sales contract through Canpotex — the Canadian potash export consortium owned by Potash Corp., Mosaic Co. and Agrium — should happen in August or September, Wilson said.

China is the world’s biggest user of potash, and Canpotex’s contract with Sinofert Holdings Ltd. runs through the second quarter of 2012.

India and China buy Canadian potash through contracts renewed roughly annually, unlike other users, including Brazil, which buy on the spot market.

A nearly weeklong rail strike by Canadian Pacific Railway, which hampered the movement of potash from mines in the Saskatchew­an, also contribute­d to the buildup, Wilson said.

He also said there may be two or three new potash mines built in Saskatchew­an by 2020, out of a number of projects that are in the works.

“You’ve got two people talking, and a whole bunch of juniors who in essence don’t have the financial capability or technical capability to build,” Wilson said from Calgary. “New mines? Maybe two, possibly three.

“As people go along, they find out that these are not cheap.”

BHP Billiton Ltd. has started site work on what would be the world’s biggest potash mine at Jansen, Sask., but some in the industry have speculated that the project could be delayed.

Germany’s K+ S Ag, the world’s fifthlarge­st potash producer by capacity, is scheduled to break ground next week on a new mine near Bethune, Sask.

Agrium looks to buy more than 200 Canadian farm retail outlets and a stake in the Canadian Fertilizer­s Limited nitrogen plant in Alberta, as Glencore Internatio­nal PLC moves to take over grain handler Viterra Inc. and sell off some pieces. Glencore’s takeover of Viterra could close in July or August, Wilson said, pending the Canadian government’s approval.

Canada’s Competitio­n Bureau is reviewing Agrium’s purchase of Viterra assets, with some farmers saying it would control too much of Canada’s nitrogen production and farm retail sales.

Given plans for expanded nitrogen capacity by competitor­s, including Yara Internatio­nal ASA, Agrium may actually become less dominant, Wilson said.

“If anything, the competitiv­e picture is changing so rapidly on nitrogen that our position will likely be less.”

Commoditie­s, and shares of fertilizer companies by associatio­n, have fallen sharply at times recently as investors bailed on riskier assets due to fears about the eurozone economic crisis.

But even though Agrium’s shares have been volatile, its fundamenta­ls remain strong, Wilson said.

Growing population­s in China and India are moving to a better diet, driving up demand for food and fertilizer and giving farmers more money to spend.

A record- large U. S. corn crop this autumn could weigh down corn prices, but it is unlikely to deter farmers from planting plenty of corn again next year, and applying fertilizer to maximize yields, Wilson said. The price of U. S. corn could fall sharply from its current level of more than $ 5 per bushel for the next harvest, and still leave farmers in good shape, he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada