Sabic affiliate gets approval for blue ammonia plant

9 July 2024

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Sabic Agri-Nutrients Company has announced that it has received approval from Saudi Arabia’s Energy Ministry for the allocation of required quantities of feedstock for its planned blue ammonia production facility in the kingdom.

Sabic Agri-Nutrients, in which Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (Sabic) owns the majority 50.1% share, plans to build the low-carbon ammonia plant in Jubail Industrial City, located in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province.

This planned blue ammonia plant will be Sabic Agri-Nutrients' sixth manufacturing facility, the company said in a filing with the Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul), where its shares are listed.

The proposed complex will have a production capacity of 1.2 million metric tonnes a year of blue ammonia and 1.1 million metric tonnes a year of urea and specialised agri-nutrients.

Sabic Agri-Nutrients will perform the engineering and feasibility studies, and will select technologies that are “the most efficient in energy and feedstock utilisation”, it added in its filing.

ALSO READ: Sipchem gets feedstock approval for blue ammonia plant

Formerly Saudi Arabian Fertiliser Company, Sabic Agri-Nutrients was the first petrochemicals company to be established in Saudi Arabia in 1965.

Sabic Agri-Nutrients is one of the leading global fertiliser producers, with a portfolio that includes urea, ammonia, phosphate and other specialised products.

The company has struck several deals with customers worldwide in recent months to supply low-carbon ammonia and urea.

In April last year, Sabic Agri-Nutrients shipped the first independently certified low-carbon ammonia from Saudi Arabia to Japan, where it will be used as fuel for power generation. The ammonia was produced with feedstock from Saudi Aramco, sold by Aramco Trading Company to Fuji Oil Company and transported by Mitsui OSK Lines.

Following that, Sabic Agri-Nutrients shipped a cargo of 5,000 metric tonnes of low-carbon ammonia in May 2023 to a customer in India named Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative.

The company then shipped 5,000 metric tonnes of low-carbon ammonia to Taiwan Fertiliser Company in June 2023.

Sabic Agri-Nutrients’ latest supply order came in July last year when it shipped a 2,700-tonne cargo of low-carbon urea to Ravensdown, a New Zealand farmer-owned agricultural co-operative company.

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Indrajit Sen
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    Across the Maghreb, amid a range of external and internal pressures, the pursuit of political stability is emerging as the overarching preoccupation for governments as they compete for trade, growth and investor interest.

    Wracked by drought, years of disruption due to Covid-19 and the impact of the war in Ukraine on grain prices, and now facing the boot of arbitrary US tariffs, the economies of the region need certainty more than anything.

    With fast-growing populations, all of the Maghreb countries face serious challenges in maintaining sufficient job creation to cater to their youth, and with local spending constraints, attracting foreign investment is key.

    None of the Maghreb countries seem to understand this better than Morocco, which has been rolling out what might be described as a GCC-style vision for the country. Most recently, in September 2024, it launched the Digital Morocco 2030 strategy to use artificial intelligence to improve access to services in rural and underserved areas.

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    Rabat is also widening the country’s social security net, having expanded family allowances in 2023, and with plans to expand old-age pensions and unemployment benefits in 2025. The government is also improving access to services for Amazigh speakers in answer to loud political calls since the 2016-17 Amazigh-led Hirak Rif movement protests.

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    Externally, Morocco has meanwhile intensified its diplomatic campaign for international recognition of its semi-autonomy plan for Western Sahara. First proposed in 2007, the scheme initially received little traction, but the situation changed significantly in 2020 with then US President Donald Trump’s recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over the territory as part of a deal to normalise ties with Israel. In 2022, Spain also shifted its stance to one of support for Rabat’s autonomy plan, followed by France in early 2024 and by the UK in June 2025 – each country for their own reasons.

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    The government is also emphasising private sector-led growth and the rationalising of public spending, as well as initiatives to improve the business environment by reforming public banks and state-owned enterprises.

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    In May 2025, Algeria expelled 15 French diplomatic agents, citing their “irregular positions” on the geopolitical issue. The incident matched similarly negative responses by Algeria to Spain in 2022.

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    The UN remains central to Libya’s peace process, and in early 2025, the UN appointed Hanna Tetteh as the Special Representative for Libya, while a 20-member Libyan Advisory Committee was established to address contentions over the proposed electoral process.

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