Mcs2020 Potash
Mcs2020 Potash
Mcs2020 Potash
POTASH
(Data in thousand metric tons of K2O equivalent unless otherwise noted)
Domestic Production and Use: In 2019, the estimated sales value of marketable potash, f.o.b. mine, was $400
million, which was about the same as that in 2018. Potash denotes a variety of mined and manufactured salts, which
contain the element potassium in water-soluble form. In agriculture, the term potash refers to potassic fertilizers,
which are potassium chloride (KCl), potassium sulfate or sulfate of potash (SOP), and potassium magnesium sulfate
(SOPM) or langbeinite. Muriate of potash (MOP) is an agriculturally acceptable mix of KCl (95% pure or greater) and
sodium chloride for fertilizer use. The majority of U.S. production was from southeastern New Mexico, where two
companies operated two underground mines and one deep-well solution mine. Sylvinite and langbeinite ores in New
Mexico were beneficiated by flotation, dissolution-recrystallization, heavy-media separation, solar evaporation, and
(or) combinations of these processes, and accounted for about 50% of total U.S. producer sales. In Utah, two
companies operated three facilities. One company extracted underground sylvinite ore by deep-well solution mining.
Solar evaporation crystallized the sylvinite ore from the brine solution, and a flotation process separated the MOP
from byproduct sodium chloride. The firm also processed subsurface brines by solar evaporation and flotation to
produce MOP at its other facility. Another company processed brine from the Great Salt Lake by solar evaporation to
produce SOP and other byproducts.
The fertilizer industry used about 85% of U.S. potash sales, and the remainder was used for chemical and industrial
applications. About 80% of the potash produced was SOPM and SOP, which are required to fertilize certain chloride-
sensitive crops. Muriate of potash accounted for the remaining 20% of production and was used for agricultural and
chemical applications.
Recycling: None.
Import Sources (2015–18): Canada, 81%; Russia, 8%; Belarus, 5%; Israel, 2%; and other, 4%.
Events, Trends, and Issues: Domestic and world consumption of potash fertilizers was affected by wet conditions
during the planting seasons in many countries during the first half of 2019. This resulted in lower potash sales and
higher inventories worldwide. In the United States, production and sales of all forms of potash decreased slightly as
sales of SOP, SOPM, and MOP for nonfertilizer uses offset some of the lower MOP fertilizer sales. Domestic imports
and consumption fell by more than 12% owing to the poor weather conditions during the spring planting season.
High inventories caused the major world producers to reduce production during the second half of the year. Belarus,
Canada, Chile, Germany, and Israel all had temporary mine and plant closures.
POTASH
World consumption of potash was estimated to have remained about the same as in 2018 at 43 million tons, owing to
increased nonagricultural uses and regional seasonal consumption during the second half of 2019. World production
was estimated to have fallen by 5% compared with 2018, owing to high inventories.
Development of a SOP facility in Utah continued in 2019. The Sevier Playa project, which is about 225 kilometers
southwest of Salt Lake City, would produce SOP from solar evaporation of surface brines. The operating company
received final permits in 2019 and was expected to begin construction in 2020. Production was scheduled to begin in
2022 at 30,000 tons of SOP and ramp up to full capacity of 372,000 tons per year of SOP in 2025.
Global annual potash production capacity was estimated to be 61 million tons in 2019. New mines in Belarus and
Russia, and expansions to existing facilities in Canada and Israel were expected to be completed in 2020. Other
projects in Belarus, Canada, China, Jordan, and the United Kingdom could increase capacity to about 68 million tons
in 2023; however, these projects were dependent on potash market conditions or securing financing for the projects.
World Mine Production and Reserves: Reserves for Canada, Spain, and the United Kingdom were revised based
on official Government information. Reserves for Russia were revised based on information reported by the
producers. The previously reported reserve information was based on official Government data, which included some
deposits that are considered resources by USGS reserve definition.
World Resources: Estimated domestic potash resources total about 7 billion tons. Most of these lie at depths
between 1,800 and 3,100 meters in a 3,110-square-kilometer area of Montana and North Dakota as an extension of
the Williston Basin deposits in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, Canada. The Paradox Basin in Utah contains resources
of about 2 billion tons, mostly at depths of more than 1,200 meters. The Holbrook Basin of Arizona contains resources
of about 0.7 to 2.5 billion tons. A large potash resource lies about 2,100 meters under central Michigan and contains
more than 75 million tons. Estimated world resources total about 250 billion tons.
Substitutes: No substitutes exist for potassium as an essential plant nutrient and as an essential nutritional
requirement for animals and humans. Manure and glauconite (greensand) are low-potassium-content sources that
can be profitably transported only short distances to crop fields.
e
Estimated. NA Not available.
1
Data are rounded to no more than two significant digits to avoid disclosing company proprietary data.
2
Defined as sales + imports – exports.
3
Includes MOP, SOP, and SOPM. Does not include other chemical compounds that contain potassium.
4
Defined as imports – exports.
5
See Appendix C for resource and reserve definitions and information concerning data sources.
6
Israel and Jordan recover potash from the Dead Sea, which contains nearly 2 billion tons of potassium chloride.