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Trevor Williams Executive Vice President and President, Nitrogen and Phosphate Trevor Williams is the Executive Vice President and President, Nitrogen and Phosphate at Nutrien – responsible for the safe, reliable, and efficient operation of Nutrien’s Nitrogen and Phosphate businesses. Trevor was most recently the Senior VicePresident of Nitrogen Operations at Nutrien and brings a diverse array of experience leading large scale chemical operations for global companies and the execution of strategic plans to support the growth of the business, its operations, and people.
First question is something about the topic of interest about the future of clean ammonia for manufacturing. Could you talk to me about reducing carbon footprint and how Ammonia could play a significant role in a green energy future? I’m a chemical engineer by background. I’ve spent most of my career in the chemical and agricultural industry. A couple of years ago, we started to look from an environment, social and governance (ESG) principles, and sustainability perspective. We want to set targets and goals for ourselves as we look to decarbonize not only just our company, but learning how to contribute to the decarbonization of the agro sector and chemical industry in general. Initially, we really looked internally in terms of initially reducing our scope one and scope two emissions. To modify existing facilities that we have in 11 ammonia plants across our organization, they are all traditional technology. So we really looked at what could we do to reduce the energy footprint, what could we do to reduce CO2 emissions? In a big part of that, early on we collaborated in Alberta as well as in Louisiana with a couple of companies that were doing sequestration for enhanced oil recovery at a facility in Redwater, Alberta. We also have experience in the Geismar, Louisiana plant, where an internal ammonia process creates CO2 of a very high purity and quality and compresses it, later utilizing it for enhanced oil recovery and important in terms of expanding our two facilities. Beyond that we set ourselves the goal to reduce our carbon emissions by 30% from an intensity basis using a 2018 baseline to get us to 2030. As we look at more future opportunities, we could develop a plant with a goal to capture up to 95% of the CO2 production and compress it, and then either sequester it from a CO2 sequestration process. Ammonia has an important nutrient benefits from an industrial energy side, and decarbonization of other industrial products, or industrial customers to reduce CO2 emissions. There are multiple possibilities, and based on that, we searched for technologies offering us the potential to hit that goal. We started developing our “Clean ammonia project,” working with a technology provider site called ThyssenKrupp Uhde technology from Germany. We were looking at what we could do in terms of developing and partnering with ThyssenKrupp Uhde technology in developing a scope that would allow us to be able to achieve that reduction, and that’s what we’ve proposed for clean ammonia project. When we look at the market space, what are some of the opportunities of using clean ammonia as a fuel? Can you just talk to me a little bit about that? The key motivation was to reduce the intensity of our current business in terms of reducing carbon emissions. After that, helping the agricultural industry reduce carbon emissions from a farmer’s perspective is our top focus. As well as our customers, in terms of being able to provide an agricultural product or agricultural inputs that has a lower carbon footprint. It opens up the possibility of The key motivation was to reduce the intensity of our current business in terms of reducing carbon emissions. After that, helping the agricultural industry reduce carbon emissions from a farmer’s perspective is our top focus. As well as our customers, in terms of being able to provide an agricultural product or agricultural inputs that has a lower carbon footprint. It opens up the possibility of assisting other industries with their efforts to decarbonize on the gasoline, industrial, and ammonia fronts. In particular, there’s a significant opportunity from the perspective of decarbonizing the marine industry. This is really about reducing the carbon footprint of the shipping industry. The International Marine Organization really set a pretty aggressive target towards their reduction goals. Ammonia really could play a key goal or a key role, I should say, in terms of achieving their reduction targets towards 2050. As ammonia combustion doesn’t produce any CO2 emissions, that’s the first benefit as a fuel replacement to utilize it as an energy source. Asia leads an example, and in particular in South Korea and Japan is utilizing coal combustion. Typically, coal-fired electrical generation can supplement with ammonia to reduce the carbon footprint of that fuel source and use it to generate electricity. They would offset potentially 20 to 30% of their coal usage and replace that with ammonia that would have no CO2 emissions.The key motivation was to reduce the intensity of our current business in terms of reducing carbon emissions. After that, helping the agricultural industry reduce carbon emissions from a farmer's perspective is our top focus