Algeria plans to expand fertiliser plant

3 July 2025

 

Algeria’s national oil and gas company Sonatrach is developing a project that will expand the country’s fertiliser plant located in Arzew, according to industry sources.

Sonatrach has not publicly said when it expects to issue the invitation to bid for the main contract for the project.

The original $2.4bn contract to develop the Arzew Fertiliser Complex was executed by a joint venture of South Korea’s Daewoo E&C and Japan’s Mitsubishi Corporation.

The joint venture won the contract in April 2008 and completed the facility in April 2013.

The fertiliser production complex was built in the Arzew industrial zone near Oran, on the Mediterranean coast.

It produces ammonia from natural gas, and almost all of the ammonia output is converted to urea for producing granular urea to be used as fertiliser.

The complex includes two ammonia production units, each with a capacity of 2,000 tonnes a day (t/d).

It also includes two urea production units, each with a capacity of 3,500 t/d, as well as granulation plants and supporting facilities.

Sonatrach is currently trying to boost Algeria’s capacity to produce fertilisers.

In December, a total of six companies were shortlisted as part of the tender process for another fertiliser project in Algeria’s Annaba region, according to information released by the Industrial Group for Fertilisers & Phytosanitary Products (Asmidal).

Asmidal is a wholly owned subsidiary of Sonatrach.

The scope of the contract being tendered included preparing a front-end engineering and design (feed) study for a project to create a fertilisers, food phosphates and derivatives complex.

The project is expected to be worth about $1bn.

https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14192053/main.jpg
Wil Crisp
Related Articles