Potash juniors in Brazil and Africa defy industry slowdown
Potash juniors in Brazil and Africa defy industry slowdown
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Rod Nickel
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Two junior potash producers working in unusual locations look set to shake off the most bearish industry conditions in five years and open new mines, helped by their proximity to Brazil and Africa, two of the world’s most promising but under-served fertilizer markets.
Tepid global demand for the crop nutrient and sagging prices have crimped profits for producers across the industry and hurt prospects of many of the exploration companies aiming to develop new mines for the already-oversupplied industry.
The world’s biggest fertilizer company, Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan, slashed 1,000 jobs in December, while Mosaic Co., a major U.S.-based producer, last year suspended part of its expansion plans. Yet prospects are bright for Allana Potash Corp. and Verde Potash PLC, two small producers developing low-cost potash mines in Ethiopia and Brazil respectively, far from the world’s main potash regions of Western Canada and eastern Europe.
Each promises a shortcut to fertilizer-hungry markets and has attracted strategic or government backing, removing some of the risk.
Shares of Verde, which is still in the early stages of project development, have doubled in value since July 30, when Belarusian Potash Co, one of the world’s biggest potash traders, broke up and potash prices went into free fall because of the prospect of increased competition.
Allana stock is slightly higher over the same period even as Karnalyte Resources Inc., owner of a similar project in potash-rich Western Canada, has lost about half of its value.
The faith in Allana and Verde shows investors are still willing to bet on the long-term fundamentals of potash, which are based on population and income growth in the developing world fuelling greater food demand. Even so, only junior projects with such unique, built-in advantages are likely to proceed in the near term.
MINING POTASH IN AFRICA
Allana’s 1-million tonne Danakhil mine in Ethiopia may turn out to be the world’s first major greenfield potash mine in seven years if it opens on schedule in late 2016.
The estimated $642-million cost of building the mine is lower than the cost of conventional underground projects. It uses a technique that pumps water into shallow potash beds, producing a brine that is evaporated on the surface, leaving potash-bearing crystals.
Allana would provide significant domestic potash supplies for African crops and benefit from short distances to established buyers in India and Southeast Asia.
“Allana is a relatively modest cost cap-x project with low operating costs as well, so they have fared better,” said Raymond James analyst Steve Hansen. “Even in a low potash price environment, you could still argue the project has some merit.
There’s also no competition so far – unlike in the Western Canadian province of Saskatchewan.
“You’re talking about competition in the case of Saskatchewan for infrastructure, for railways, for water, for the port, so no doubt that has its own impact on the finance-ability of junior projects there,” Allana Chief Executive Farhad Abasov told Reuters, referring to the province where most of Canada’s potash is mined.
Location is also the critical selling point for Verde Potash, which aims to satisfy a sliver of Brazil’s huge demand for fertilizer to boost corn and sugarcane yields.
Verde plans to take potash from the surface at its mine in the Cerrado region to produce a modest 300,000 tonnes or more a year of ThermoPotash, a special fertilizer tailored for Brazilian soils. That capacity represents just over 10 per cent of the annual capacity of Potash Corp’s Rocanville, Saskatchewan, mine.
A second phase would produce conventional potash.
The project’s pre-feasibility study, a preliminary assessment of its viability, is due later this month.
“If you could choose one place in the world for a potash mine, I think the consensus would be Brazil,” Cristiano Veloso, chief executive of Verde Potash, said in an interview. “And then if you could pick one location in Brazil, it necessarily would be where we are in the Cerrado region.”
The Cerrado is Brazil’s grain belt, where more than half of its fertilizers are consumed, according to Verde.
Brazil relies on foreign sources for 90 per cent of the potash it uses, with Vale SA operating the country’s only potash mine.
“The one thing you do hear that’s positive in the potash sector is Brazil keeps importing record amounts every year,” said John Chu, analyst at investment bank AltaCorp Capital. “Obviously if you’re based in Brazil and you can provide that domestic production, that would be a positive.”
ADDING TO OVER-SUPPLY?
But adding to a potash surplus comes with considerable risk.
Global potash production capacity currently exceeds demand by 15 million tonnes, or 27 per cent, and further build-out in the next few years may limit any price rebound, according to a March 5 report by TD Economics senior economist Sonya Gulati.
Germany’s K+S AG and Australia’s BHP Billiton Ltd already have new Canadian mines in the works, although low prices have caused BHP to hold off on final approval.
The spot Vancouver, British Columbia price was $300 per tonne in January, the lowest since 2008 and well below the long-term potash price of $430 assumed by Allana in its feasibility study, although prices have since risen in some markets.
It’s also no sure bet when Africa’s fast growth will translate into fertilizer demand.
“Africa will one day be a very important market. The issue is people have been saying that for 20 years,” said Mosaic Chief Financial Officer Larry Stranghoener, on Wednesday, adding that his company has no plans to significantly invest there.
FUNDS FROM HIGH PLACES
Powerful partners help offset some of those risks.
Verde scored a $105-million commitment in loans, equity and grants last month from the Brazilian government, worth 90 per cent of the construction cost for its first phase.
Allana signed a partnership in February with the world’s sixth-largest potash producer, Israel Chemicals Ltd, which agreed to buy at least 16 per cent of Allana’s regular shares and the mine’s output.
The company’s Ethiopia site has also brought on board the International Finance Corp, a member of World Bank Group, which took an equity stake and agreed to help with construction.
Western Canada is more stable politically than East Africa, but in the current environment to finance a potash project, “you’re better off being in a developing nation,” Allana’s Abasov said.
“We’re talking about fertilizer, a food-related product, in a country that has been experiencing recurring famines until recently. There’s a great overlap of all interests.”
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