{"id":2853987,"version":0,"headline":"OCP, Koch deepen phosphate ties","dateModified":"2026-07-17T21:01:51Z","datePublished":"2026-07-17T20:24:35Z","articleBody":"<article><p class=\"lead\">Major Moroccan phosphates producer OCP Nutricrops has reported selling a 50pc stake in one of its production units to US trading firm Koch Ag &amp; Energy Solutions.</p><p>The agreement will forge a 50:50 operating joint venture over the Jorf fertilizers company 1 (JFC 1) unit in Jorf Lasfar, which has a nameplate capacity of 1.2mn t/yr of phosphate-based fertilizers. </p><p>OCP says that this will bring the total production capacity under its joint ventures with Koch to 2.5mn t/yr following its <a href=\"https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2307450\">sale of a 50pc stake in Jorf Fertilizers III</a> — renamed Kofert — to Koch in March 2022. </p><p>The product from JFC will be marketed globally, but the agreement comes just weeks after the US <a href=\"https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2845779\">suspended countervailing duties on imports of Moroccan phosphates</a> for eight months. This has reopened the door to the US market for OCP.</p><p>JFC 1 is one of many production facilities which OCP operates at its Jorf Lasfar complex. <i>Argus</i> understands that OCP had broadly been operating at around 50pc of its total capacity over June, largely because of a lack of sulphur. </p><p>The producer is understood to now have enough sulphur to theoretically run at 100pc capacity over July-August. But since the conflict between Iran and the US has re-escalated, and Kazakh sulphur remains out of the market, maintaining sulphur stocks continues to be a challenge for all producers. </p><p class=\"bylines\">By Tom Hampson</p></article>","dateline":"London, 17 July (Argus)","license":"<footer><p><br> Send comments and request more information at <a href=\"mailto:feedback@argusmedia.com?subject=Argus Direct article feedback&body=I am contacting you regarding OCP, Koch deepen phosphate ties, available at http://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/cs-24838278.\" target=\"_parent\"> feedback@argusmedia.com </a></p><p><i> Copyright © 2026. <a href=\"http://www.argusmedia.com/\" target=\"_blank\">Argus Media group</a>. All rights reserved. </i></p></footer>","copyrightHolder":"Argus Media group","copyrightYear":2026,"taxonomy":{"contexts":[{"name":"Fundamentals","children":[{"name":"Supply","children":[]}]}],"regions":[{"name":"Africa","children":[{"name":"North Africa","children":[{"name":"Morocco","children":[]}]}]}],"sectors":[{"name":"Fertilizers","children":[{"name":"Phosphate","children":[]}]}]},"pullQuote":null,"newsType":"Daily news","language":"en-GB","keywords":null,"isFree":true,"isFeatured":false,"body":"<p class=\"lead\">Major Moroccan phosphates producer OCP Nutricrops has reported selling a 50pc stake in one of its production units to US trading firm Koch Ag &amp; Energy Solutions.</p><p>The agreement will forge a 50:50 operating joint venture over the Jorf fertilizers company 1 (JFC 1) unit in Jorf Lasfar, which has a nameplate capacity of 1.2mn t/yr of phosphate-based fertilizers. </p><p>OCP says that this will bring the total production capacity under its joint ventures with Koch to 2.5mn t/yr following its <a href=\"https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2307450\">sale of a 50pc stake in Jorf Fertilizers III</a> — renamed Kofert — to Koch in March 2022. </p><p>The product from JFC will be marketed globally, but the agreement comes just weeks after the US <a href=\"https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2845779\">suspended countervailing duties on imports of Moroccan phosphates</a> for eight months. This has reopened the door to the US market for OCP.</p><p>JFC 1 is one of many production facilities which OCP operates at its Jorf Lasfar complex. <i>Argus</i> understands that OCP had broadly been operating at around 50pc of its total capacity over June, largely because of a lack of sulphur. </p><p>The producer is understood to now have enough sulphur to theoretically run at 100pc capacity over July-August. But since the conflict between Iran and the US has re-escalated, and Kazakh sulphur remains out of the market, maintaining sulphur stocks continues to be a challenge for all producers. </p><p class=\"bylines\">By Tom Hampson</p>","lead":"Major Moroccan phosphates producer OCP Nutricrops has reported selling a 50pc stake in one of its production units to US trading firm Koch Ag &amp; Energy Solutions.","cmsId":"24838278","source":"Censhare"}