All posts by mickeybarb@charter.net

Sulfuric Acid

U.S. Gulf:

Sources continued to call recent Gulf import sulfuric acid pricing in the $240-$245/mt CFR range, unchanged from one week earlier.

U.S. Imports:

October sulfuric acid imports were off 18.3 percent, to 295,158 st from 361,398 st in the prior year. Imports fell 16.2 percent for July-October, to 1.20 million st from the year-ago 1.43 million st.

U.S. Exports:

Sulfuric acid exports for October firmed 72.9 percent, to 29,977 st from 17,336 st last year. July-October exports were up 99.0 percent, to 155,457 st from 78,137 st in the prior year.

Gulf Coast:

Gulf Coast sulacid contracts were reported at $85-$110/st DEL for 2021. Concluded 2022 annual contracts were quoted firming to $195-$230/st DEL, leaving the market at a wide $85-$230/st DEL range for the week.

Midwest:

The Midwest market mirrored the Gulf Coast at $85-$110/st DEL for 2021 and $195-$230/st DEL for 2022.

West Coast:

Annual West Coast sulfuric acid contracts reported at $100-$130/st DEL for 2021 were quoted firming to the $185-$220/st DEL range for 2022 agreements, leaving the combined 2021-2022 market in the $100-$220/st DEL range.

Brazil:

Recent Brazil import values were heard in the $260-$270/st CFR range, steady from the prior report.

Ammonium Thiosulfate

Eastern Cornbelt:

The ammonium thiosulfate market had reportedly firmed to $550-$600/st FOB in the Eastern Cornbelt, with the low at Seneca, Ill., and the high for the last confirmed business at Terre Haute, Ind. The Cincinnati market was quoted firmly at the $580/st FOB level at midweek.

Western Cornbelt:

The last ammonium thiosulfate business was reported at the $600/st level FOB Waterloo, Iowa, for limited tons.

California:

New ammonium thiosulfate offers were quoted at the $440/st FOB level in California, up from $380-$387/st FOB at last report.

Pacific Northwest:

The ammonium thiosulfate market remained at $415/st FOB and $420-$440/st DEL in the region in mid-December.

Western Canada:

The latest offers for ammonium thiosulfate were pegged at the C$705/mt DEL level in Western Canada.

Calcium Ammonium Nitrate

California:

The CAN-17 market in California remained at $420/st FOB Stockton and $435/st FOB Woodland and Helm. Sources said a $30/st increase is scheduled at Stockton on Jan. 1, however, with pricing on that date firming to $450/st FOB.

Pacific Northwest:

New CAN-17 prices in the Pacific Northwest were reported at the $450/st level FOB Kennewick, up $20/st from last report.

Sulfate of Potash

U.S. Imports:

SOP imports firmed 177.7 percent for the July-October period, to 56,767 st from the prior-year 20,442 st. Imports were down 70.3 percent in October, however, to 2,954 st from 9,958 st.

U.S. Exports:

October SOP exports were noted at 3,094 st, down 72.3 percent from the year-ago 11,173 st. Exports totaled 17,259 st in July-October, falling 4.8 percent from the year-ago 18,132 st.

California:

SOP pricing remained at $825-$840/st FOB in California for limited tons. Some sources reported reduced SOP volumes on nuts and prunes this fall, citing higher input costs and uncertainty about nut prices going forward.

SOP Magnesia

Southern Plains:

Intrepid raised its Trio postings FOB Carlsbad, with new reference pricing reported at $445/st for standard, $480/st for granular, $505/st for premium, $520/st for OMRI standard and fine standard, and $555/st for OMRI granular. Those levels were up $75-$85/st from the company’s last postings, depending on grade.

California:

The SOP Magnesia market in California had reportedly firmed to $605/st FOB for allocated tons, up from the last reported level of $525/st FOB for fall pricing.

Pacific Northwest:

The SOP Magnesia market was reported at the $625/st FOB level in the Pacific Northwest, up $100/st from the last fall pricing offers.

Crops/Weather

Eastern Cornbelt:

U.S. Drought Monitor

High winds caused power outages in parts of Illinois on Dec. 15-16, with top wind speeds reported at 70 mph in some northern areas of the state and up to 40-50 mph in central Illinois. The same storm system had earlier hammered the Western Cornbelt with tornadoes and 100-mph wind gusts, but it weakened as it approached Wisconsin and Illinois.

Wet, windy weather was also reported across central and northern Indiana at midweek, with reports of 50-mph wind gusts in parts of northern Ohio on Dec. 16.

Western Cornbelt:

Strong storms caused widespread damage across parts of Iowa and Nebraska at midweek, prompting multiple tornado warnings and a disaster declaration from Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds for 43 Iowa counties. Wind speeds over 90 mph were reported in Lincoln, Neb., on Dec. 15, with multiple locations reporting gusts over 100 mph.

Strong winds also battered parts of Missouri at midweek, with reports of up to 165,000 power outages in the Kansas City and St. Joseph areas.

California:

A powerful weather system brought heavy rain and snow to California during the week, resulting in numerous flash floods and mudslides.

Rainfall totals included more than 11 inches in some areas north of San Francisco, 8.1 inches in parts of Santa Barbara County, and nearly five inches in Orange County south of Los Angeles. Snow totals ranging from 3-5 feet were reported in the Sierra Nevada, along with 60-mph wind gusts.

The heavy precipitation is desperately needed to pull the state out of critical drought conditions. As of Dec. 16, most of California remained in extreme-to-exceptional drought, with small patches of moderate-to-severe drought reported in far northwestern and southern areas of the state.

Pacific Northwest:

A strong storm brought winter weather conditions to much of the Pacific Northwest at mid-month. In Oregon, heavy rain was reported in western areas of the state, with freezing temperatures contributing to significant snowfall in the Cascades.

Midweek snowfall was also reported across Idaho, eastern Washington, and western Montana, with several inches of accumulation reported in the valleys and several feet at higher elevations in the mountains.

The prior weekend brought heavy rain and gusty winds to western Washington as well, along with significant mountain snowfall ranging from 18-24 inches at Snoqualmie and Stevens Pass and as much as 3-4 feet at Mount Rainer and Mount Baker.

Western Canada:

Extremely cold temperatures developed over much of Western Canada as the week progressed, along with potentially heavy snowfall in some areas.

In British Columbia, extreme cold warnings were in effect at midweek for the Peace River and Dease Lake regions, with lows falling to -26 C and wind chills dipping to -40 C. Parts of Alberta and Saskatchewan experienced similar arctic temperatures, with highs in Edmonton, Prince Albert, and Saskatoon failing to climb above -20 C on Dec. 16.

Parts of northern Manitoba were bracing for blizzard conditions on Dec. 16, with reports of heavy snow and 60 km/h winds in Churchill and York. Snowfall was also in the forecast for British Columbia’s Cariboo, West Columbia, and Williston regions late in the week.