Middle East > Jordan > Jordan is home to additional than 20 non-metallic minerals and four major metallic deposits

Jordan: Jordan is home to additional than 20 non-metallic minerals and four major metallic deposits

2015/12/27

As the seventh-major producer of potash in the world, Jordan is producing around 2m tonnes per annum of this vital fertiliser ingredient. The country is as well home to one of the world’s major phosphate rock sectors, making minerals extraction one of the country’s top industrial sectors and a major support for the Jordanian economy.

World competition has increased in the completed decade, with the kingdom’s potash and phosphate miners obliged to find new ways to boost efficiency and gain new markets. The sector is as well getting sharper at utilising its existing resources and leveraging Jordan’s strong positioning in world supply chains.

LONG PEDIGREE: Jordan is home to additional than 20 non-metallic minerals and four major metallic deposits within its 89,566-sq-km territory. Copper and iron mining has been conducted in the area presently known as Jordan since the Bronze Age, although recent mining activity began in earnest in 1949, with the establishment of the Jordan Phosphate Mines Company (JPMC). The major mineral extraction industries in the kingdom have since been dominated by phosphates and potash, but as well include salt, calcium carbonate, treated zeolite, treated silica and travertine.

Next JPMC began operations, the Arab Potash Company (APC) was formed in 1956 and awarded a 100-year concession to exploit minerals derived from the Dead Sea region. APC in turn has a number of key subsidiaries and affiliates. The subsidiaries are the Jordan Magnesia Company, Arab Fertilisers and Chemicals Industries (KEMAPCO), the Numeira Mixed Salts and Mud Company, and the Jordan Dead Sea Industries Company. The affiliates are: the Jordan Bromine Company (JBC); the Nippon-Jordan Fertilisers Company (NJFC), which produces and markets products in Japan in partnership with JPMC and Mitsubishi; and the Jordan Industrial Ports Company (JIPC), which works with JPMC and the Aqaba Development Corporation in the expansion of export facilities at Aqaba.

APC, as the name suggests, has a multinational structure, with members of its board not only from the Jordanian government (in the form of the Ministry of Finance and the Social Security Corporation) but as well the Iraqi government and the Libyan and Kuwaiti national investment authorities. The Jeddah-based Islamic Development Bank as well holds a seat.

FACTS & FIGURES: In 2014 Jordan produced a total of 2.1m tonnes of potash, according to the APC 2014 annual statement. This was up from 1.7m tonnes in 2013 and 1.8m tonnes in 2012. The lead producing nations in 2014 included Canada, with 17.1m tonnes; Russia, with 12.1m tonnes; and Belarus, with 10.1m tonnes. World production was 59.9m tonnes, up around 10%. This made Jordan the seventh-major world producer with around 4% of the world market. Total world deliveries, meanwhile, were 59.7m tonnes in 2014, up from 53.5m tonnes in 2013.

Prices have as well undergone major changes, falling dramatically since the world potash industry underwent a major convulsion in 2013. Up until again, world prices in the $20bn world potash market had largely been set by a duopoly: Belarusian Potash Company (BPC) and Capote, a conglomerate that exported product from the Canadian Potash Company and US-based Agrium Incorporated and Mosaic. In 2013, however, Russia’s Uralkali, which had before exported through BPC, decided to exit its partnership with the Belarusians – one that had controlled some 40% of the world market.

This opened potash to a price war, with Belarusian extractor Belaruskali increasing production and undercutting competitors’ prices in February 2015. In such an environment, costs are key, with depreciation of both the Russian rouble and the Canadian dollar against the US dollar meaning both groups have been able to reduce their export costs while Jordan’s potash sector has faced an increasingly cost-conscious, low-price world marketplace.

COMPETITIVE GROWTH: APC has clearly completed some remarkable successes in this competitive field. In 2014, it grew its sales by 26% on 2013, up from 1.77m tonnes to 2.24m tonnes, with China additional than doubling its previous year’s take and African sales up 37% by volume. China and India are the world’s biggest markets for potash, with APC’s sales to India as well increasing by 46%. APC has several natural advantages to leverage. Initial, potash is completely close to the surface in Jordan, making the cost of extraction low. The country is as well near major markets such as India and Europe, with easy access to an significant emerging market, Africa. The port of Aqaba is central here, with APC working with JIPC on the construction of a new jetty. Contractors were chosen in September 2014 and completion is expected in 2016.

At the same time, APC – along with a lot of Jordanian industries – has to contend with relatively high energy costs. While some competitors have benefitted from falling oil prices over the last year, in Jordan electricity has gone up in price, as the government has progressively phased out fuel subsides. However, according to Sheldon Fink, CEO of PBI Aqaba, energy issues can be overplayed. “The cost of energy in Jordan is not a major problem, particularly at the same time as compared to energy costs of other nations with highly developed industry sectors, such as Israel and Turkey,” he told OBG The appreciation of the US dollar has as well had an result – the Jordanian dinar is pegged to the dollar, so prices of Jordanian potash have risen with it, further undercutting price advantages.

APC has taken substantial measures to ward off the negative effects of energy price hikes, however. In February 2014, the company signed a $771m transaction with US company Nobel Energy to provide 2bn cu metres of natural gas from its concessions in Israel’s offshore Tamar gas field. The 15-year transaction should reduce the cost of a tonne of Jordanian potash by about $15. A pipeline will deliver the gas, with provision in the transaction and design for volumes to be expanded someday. At the same time, APC has been looking into solar energy to as well cut costs, while undertaking strict cost management practices in its day-to-day activities.

PHOSPHATE PRODUCTION: JPMC has been exploiting what are the world’s fifth-major reserves of phosphate, at 3.7bn tonnes – 1.25bn tonnes of which are within the company’s concessions. With an annual production capacity of over 7m tonnes, JPMC is the second-major exporter and sixth-major producer of phosphates worldwide. With total capital of JD75m ($105.5m), the company has a diverse group of shareholders, inclunding the Jordan Investment Corporation (65.66%), the Social Security Corporation (16%) and the government of Kuwait (9.3%). It as well has a number of subsidiaries and affiliates, inclunding the Jordan India Fertilisers Company, the Indo-Jordan Chemicals Company, and its stake in NJFC and JIPC. The company as well has a joint venture with Indonesia’s PT Petrokimia Gresik, known as PT Petro Jordan Abad, which manufactures phosphoric and sulphuric acids and gypsum.

Phosphates have long been mined at Russaifa and Al Hassa in southern Jordan, with JPMC currently operating additional mines at Eshidiya and Wadi Al Abiad. Trains again carry much of the phosphate to Aqaba. In 2014, the company’s annual statement revealed that it had produced 7.1m tonnes, up 31.5% on 2013, with 4.6m tonnes exported – 42.2% up on the total for 2013. Local consumption as well increased, from 1.8m to 2.7m tonnes. A new project to build a railway line connecting Aqaba to the Eshidiya (as well known as Al Shidiya) phosphate mine is as well under way , with construction on the initial phase of the project by presently started as of early 2015 (see Transport chapter).

OTHER PRODUCTS: JBC as well extracts bromine at Ghur Al Safi from the Dead Sea. Other mineral extraction industries feed the local construction sector, with limestone deposits distributed from Irbid to Maan, chalk in the Azraq basin, and travertine – a volcanic product deposited on the eastern Dead Sea rift valley – exploited by the Travertine Company. There are as well large reserves of silica sand in southern Jordan and clay – both bentonite and kaolin.

FACING THE COMPETITION: The phosphate and potash sectors are crucial export earners for Jordan, with the extractive industries becoming even additional central to the kingdom’s economy in the years approaching thanks to shale oil. This new sector will be able to benefit from the considerable expertise by presently built up by the country’s miners. Going forward, cost control will likely continue to be the sector’s major concern. This will be particularly challenging, although with subsidies being reduced and gas on the way from the Mediterranean, the sector’s prospects look brighter.

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