Yara Confirms US Ammonia Strategy
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9 Articles
Air Products partnering with crop nutrition company
Air Products announced recently that it will be working with crop nutrition and ammonia company Yara International ASA to combine Air Products’ industrial gas capabilities and low-emission hydrogen with Yara’s ammonia production and distribution network. According to a press release, Air products is working on the Louisiana Clean Energy Complex to become the world’s largest low-carbon energy complex. The complex is designed to produce around 7…
Air Products and Yara in Advanced Negotiations to Partner on Low-emission Ammonia Projects
Air Products and Yara in Advanced Negotiations to Partner on Low-emission Ammonia Projects Plans connect Air Products’ low-emission ammonia projects in the U.S. and Saudi Arabia with Yara’s world-scale ammonia network. Final Investment Decisions by both companies for the U.S. project (Louisiana Clean Energy Complex) are targeted by mid-2026, subject to, among other things, air permit issuance and finalization of construction contracts; and Fin…
Air Products Stock Plunges to 52‑Week Low on Yara Hydrogen Deal – What It Means for APD Investors Now
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. (NYSE: APD) just had a rough session.On December 8, 2025, the stock dropped roughly 9–10%, hit a new 52‑week low around $235–236, and briefly became the worst performer in the S&P 500 after the company announced advanced partnership talks with Yara International on major low‑emission ammonia projects in the U.S. and Saudi Arabia. MarketScreener+1 At the close, APD was around $236 per share, down from a prior clos…
Yara Confirms US Ammonia Strategy
Yara and Air Products have advanced negotiations to partner on low-emission ammonia projects.Yara has matured a project portfolio for potential investment in cost competitive US ammonia to diversify its energy position and increase competitiveness…
Nobody Seems to Want Carbon Capture — Not Even Air Products
Air Products’ proposed carbon-capture and hydrogen project threatens the Maurepas Swamp and surrounding Louisiana communities with dangerous CO₂ pipelines, industrial noise, and long-term ecological risks. Residents, parish leaders, and climate advocates across the region are united in opposition as the project moves forward despite the company’s own attempt to shed liability. Louisiana now waits for Gov. Landry’s decision.
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