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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Yara gets US$93M in 3 years for operating Tringen

by

580 days ago
20231019

Ma­jor­i­ty state-owned am­mo­nia pro­duc­er Trin­gen (Trinidad Ni­tro­gen Ltd) re­im­bursed the com­pa­ny’s mi­nor­i­ty share­hold­er, Nor­way’s Yara, a to­tal of $624.05 mil­lion (US$93.13 mil­lion) in the last three years for the man­age­ment and op­er­a­tion of Trin­gen’s two am­mo­nia plants on the Point Lisas In­dus­tri­al Es­tate.

Fifty-one per cent of Trin­gen is owned by pub­licly list­ed Na­tion­al En­ter­pris­es Ltd (NEL) and 49 per cent by Yara Caribbean (2002) Ltd, which whol­ly owns Yara Trinidad, the com­pa­ny that con­tract­ed the man­age­ment and op­er­at­ing agree­ment with Trin­gen.

Un­der that agree­ment, Trin­gen re­im­burs­es Yara Trinidad for all di­rect costs and 90 per cent of the to­tal in­di­rect costs in­curred in car­ry­ing out its oblig­a­tions, ac­cord­ing to in­for­ma­tion con­tained in Trin­gen’s 2022 and 2021 fi­nan­cial state­ments. The Trin­gen au­dits were con­duct­ed by Ernst & Young Ser­vices Ltd (EY).

Be­fore Jan­u­ary 1, 2021, Trin­gen re­im­bursed Yara 66.67 per cent of its in­di­rect costs. But ef­fec­tive Jan­u­ary 1, 2021, Trin­gen agreed to amend the terms of the man­age­ment and op­er­a­tions agree­ment to in­crease Yara’s re­im­burse­ment for in­di­rect costs to 90 per cent.

A Trin­gen source ex­plained that Yara’s per­cent­age re­im­burse­ment was in­creased from 66.67 per cent to 90 per cent be­cause of the clo­sure of the am­mo­nia plant that was owned and op­er­at­ed en­tire­ly by Yara.

“The costs are now di­vid­ed be­tween two plants and ad­min­is­tra­tion rather than three,” said the source.

Yara’s whol­ly owned am­mo­nia plant was closed on De­cem­ber 31, 2019 and the re­im­burse­ment was in­creased on Jan­u­ary 1, 2021.

“This agree­ment al­so al­lows Yara Trinidad Ltd. to pro­vide the ser­vices of its em­ploy­ees as it deems nec­es­sary for the man­age­ment and op­er­a­tions of the com­pa­ny (Trin­gen),” ac­cord­ing to note 1 of the EY au­dit.

Trin­gen’s re­im­burse­ment of Yara amount­ed to $258.385 mil­lion in 2022, $211.266 mil­lion in 2021 and $154.405 mil­lion in 2019–a to­tal of $624.056 mil­lion.

The orig­i­nal man­age­ment and op­er­a­tions agree­ment is dat­ed May 6, 1976. The agree­ment has been up­dat­ed since then, with the pre­vi­ous agree­ment ex­pir­ing on De­cem­ber 31, 2018.

The cur­rent agree­ment was re­newed for a fur­ther five-year pe­ri­od be­gin­ning on Jan­u­ary 1, 2019. The agree­ment ex­pires on De­cem­ber 31, 2023 and is in the process of be­ing rene­go­ti­at­ed by NEL and Yara.

Asked why Yara, the 49 per cent mi­nor­i­ty share­hold­er of Trin­gen, gets re­im­bursed un­der the man­age­ment and op­er­at­ing agree­ment, pres­i­dent of Yara Trinidad, Treveno Mowassie said: “The re­im­burse­ments in­di­cat­ed in the Ernst & Young re­port are re­lat­ed to the costs in­curred by Yara Trinidad Ltd for op­er­at­ing and main­tain­ing the Trin­gen plants and re­lat­ed in­fra­struc­ture as well as ad­min­is­tra­tive cost func­tions nec­es­sary for the Trin­gen busi­ness. These are re­im­bursed at cost.

“The board of di­rec­tors of Trin­gen ap­proves a bud­get for op­er­at­ing ex­pens­es as part of the an­nu­al busi­ness plan­ning process and ap­proves the au­dit­ed fi­nan­cial state­ments.”

Asked on Tues­day morn­ing to spec­i­fy the in­di­rect costs for which Yara is be­ing re­im­bursed, the Yara pres­i­dent had not re­spond­ed by Wednes­day morn­ing.

Ques­tioned on who au­dits the ex­pens­es in­curred by Yara, Mowassie said: “Fi­nan­cial state­ments are au­dit­ed an­nu­al­ly by in­de­pen­dent ex­ter­nal au­di­tors both with­in Trinidad and in­ter­na­tion­al­ly.”

Yara Trinidad has ap­prox­i­mate­ly 180 em­ploy­ees.

By agree­ment, the Trin­gen board has six di­rec­tors: three di­rec­tors rep­re­sent­ing the in­ter­ests of NEL and three rep­re­sent­ing the in­ter­ests of Yara. The cur­rent chair of Trin­gen is In­grid Lash­ley, who al­so chairs the NEL board. The Trin­gen chair does not have a cast­ing vote, which sug­gests the board can on­ly take de­ci­sions if there is con­sen­sus.

Trin­gen’s an­nus mirabilis

Last year was a record year for Trin­gen.

The am­mo­nia pro­duc­er’s gross rev­enue in 2022 to­talled $5.40 bil­lion (US$806 mil­lion), a 66.44 per cent in­crease com­pared to the $3.24 bil­lion (US$484.47 mil­lion) it gen­er­at­ed in 2021 in 2022.

The sharp in­crease in rev­enue ex­pe­ri­enced by Trin­gen in 2022 re­sult­ed from the fact that an­hy­drous am­mo­nia prices com­pa­ny achieved record highs in nom­i­nal terms for the year, peak­ing at over US$1,600 a tonne. The es­ca­la­tion in am­mo­nia prices was pri­mar­i­ly due to as a re­sult of the Russ­ian in­va­sion of Ukraine and the val­ue chain dis­rup­tions that fol­lowed the end of the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic.

Trin­gen’s af­ter-tax prof­it jumped by 56 per cent to $1.45 bil­lion (US$217.16 mil­lion), com­pared to the $933.46 mil­lion (US$139.32 mil­lion) the com­pa­ny de­clared in 2021.

Last year, Trin­gen paid div­i­dends of $855.96 mil­lion (US$127.75 mil­lion) to its two share­hold­er–NEL and Yara. In 2022, NEL re­ceived $436.54 mil­lion (US$65.15 mil­lion), com­pris­ing the fi­nal div­i­dend for 2021 and the in­ter­im div­i­dend for 2022. Yara Caribbean (2000) Ltd re­ceived $419.42 mil­lion (US$62.6 mil­lion).

Trin­gen paid out 58.80 per cent of its 2022 af­ter-tax prof­it as a div­i­dend. As at the end of De­cem­ber 2022, the com­pa­ny had $1.93 bil­lion (US$288.35 mil­lion) in re­tained earn­ings.

NEL re­ceived $380.81 mil­lion in div­i­dend in­come for the nine-month pe­ri­od end­ed June 30, 2023. The in­vest­ment hold­ing com­pa­ny made three div­i­dend pay­ments to­talling $0.50 to its share­hold­ers. With is­sued share cap­i­tal of 600,000,641 shares, NEL’s to­tal div­i­dend pay­ments to its share­hold­ers in its 2023 fi­nan­cial year, so far, was $300,000,320.

NEL’s main share­hold­ers are Cor­po­ra­tion Sole (Min­is­ter of Fi­nance) with 66.05 per cent and the Na­tion­al Gas Com­pa­ny with 16.67 per cent. NGC is 100 per cent owned by Cor­po­ra­tion Sole.

Ac­cord­ing to the Min­istry of En­er­gy web­site, the an­nu­al ca­pac­i­ty of Trin­gen I, which was com­mis­sioned in 1977, is 500,000 tonnes. Com­mis­sioned in 1988, the an­nu­al ca­pac­i­ty of Trin­gen II is 495,000 tonnes. The to­tal an­nu­al ca­pac­i­ty of the two Trin­gen plants is 995,000 tonnes

In 2022, the to­tal pro­duc­tion of both Trin­gen I and II was 750,781 tonnes, which means the two am­mo­nia plants pro­duced 75.45 per cent of their an­nu­al ca­pac­i­ty last year, ac­cord­ing to da­ta on the Min­istry of En­er­gy web­site.

Trin­gen I and II ex­port­ed 727,186 met­ric tonnes of am­mo­nia in 2022, which is 96.85 per cent of the com­pa­ny’s pro­duc­tion in 2022.

“All pro­duc­tion from Trin­gen I and II is sold through sales agency agree­ments, with a re­lat­ed par­ty, on the open mar­ket,” ac­cord­ing to the EY au­dit.

In 2022, Trin­gen sold am­mo­nia worth $2.75 bil­lion (US$410.44 mil­lion) through Yara Switzer­land and $2.64 bil­lion (US$394 mil­lion) through Yara Am­mo­nia Inc. That means in 2022 a to­tal of $5.40 bil­lion (US$806.26 mil­lion) was sold through re­lat­ed par­ties of Yara Trinidad, on the open mar­ket, in ac­cor­dance with the sales agency agree­ment.

Asked what per­cent­age of the am­mo­nia pro­duced by Trin­gen is sold to re­lat­ed par­ties of Yara, Mowassie said: “Trin­gen am­mo­nia is sold for the best avail­able mar­ket price any­where in the world, and as a re­sult, the per­cent­age sold to Yara-re­lat­ed par­ties varies wide­ly. Pric­ing is based on in­de­pen­dent in­ter­na­tion­al mar­ket pub­li­ca­tions.”

Trin­gen’s back­ground

The site in Point Lisas has a rich his­to­ry that goes back to the es­tab­lish­ment of the first petro­chem­i­cal plant in 1964. From this, a joint ven­ture with Trin­gen was es­tab­lished in 1977 with the con­struc­tion of the Trin­gen I plant and then fur­ther ex­pand­ed in 1988 with the es­tab­lish­ment of the Trin­gen II plant. Af­ter ac­quir­ing the in­ter­ests of the pre­vi­ous op­er­a­tor in 1991, Hy­dro Agri which lat­er was di­vest­ed in­to Yara in 2004, has op­er­at­ed the am­mo­nia plants on the Point Lisas site through Yara Trinidad Ltd and has forged a long-stand­ing re­la­tion­ship with Trin­gen as the man­ag­er and op­er­a­tor.

Yara Trinidad Ltd has op­ti­mized Trin­gen’s busi­ness per­for­mance through ac­cess to world-class safe­ty prac­tices and poli­cies spe­cif­ic to the in­dus­try, tech­ni­cal re­sources through world­wide com­mu­ni­ties of prac­tice, and a glob­al view of busi­ness an­a­lyt­ics.

In ad­di­tion, as the largest trad­er of am­mo­nia glob­al­ly, Yara has ac­cess to mar­kets across the globe there­by bring­ing both com­mer­cial ad­van­tages and sta­ble mar­kets for Trin­gen’s prod­uct through the cyclic com­mer­cial na­ture of the busi­ness.

This has been demon­strat­ed most re­cent­ly with both a record year of am­mo­nia prices in 2022 reach­ing the un­heard-of lev­el of US$1,625 per tonne due to the war in Ukraine while now in 2023 nav­i­gat­ing through huge­ly dif­fer­ent mar­ket con­di­tions, with am­mo­nia prices as low as US$285 per tonne. Source: Treveno Mowassie


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