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Air Products Abandons Louisiana Clean Energy Complex, Pivots to NEOM Renewable Ammonia Deal with Yara

By MGN EditorialJune 30, 2026 at 06:00 PM

Air Products has cancelled its Louisiana Clean Energy Complex project, taking a significant pre-tax charge, while finalising a renewable ammonia supply agreement with Yara linked to the NEOM Green Hydrogen Project in Saudi Arabia.

## Air Products Exits Louisiana Clean Energy Project, Shifts Focus to NEOM Green Hydrogen Air Products (NYSE: APD) has announced it will not proceed with its Louisiana Clean Energy Complex (LCEC), a major setback for one of the most high-profile clean hydrogen infrastructure projects in the United States. The Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania-based industrial gases giant confirmed the decision on 30 June 2026, stating that the LCEC project exit and related portfolio actions will result in a pre-tax charge in the company's fiscal third quarter. The LCEC had been positioned as a cornerstone of America's emerging clean hydrogen economy, intended to produce blue hydrogen and ammonia at scale on the US Gulf Coast. Its cancellation underscores the ongoing commercial and financial challenges facing large-scale clean energy projects, even as governments and industry continue to pursue decarbonisation targets. ### Pivot to NEOM and Yara Partnership Despite the Louisiana withdrawal, Air Products signalled a continued commitment to the green hydrogen and ammonia supply chain through an alternative route. The company confirmed it is finalising an agreement with Norwegian fertiliser and clean ammonia major Yara to supply renewable ammonia produced at the NEOM Green Hydrogen Project in Saudi Arabia. The NEOM project, located in the northwest of the Kingdom, is one of the world's largest green hydrogen initiatives and has been designed to produce ammonia for export to global markets. A supply arrangement with Yara — a significant player in both agricultural ammonia and the emerging green shipping fuels sector — would provide a commercial offtake pathway for NEOM's output and could have meaningful implications for the marine fuels market, where ammonia is increasingly viewed as a viable zero-carbon fuel candidate. ### Maritime Industry Implications For the maritime sector, the developments carry notable significance. Green and renewable ammonia has attracted growing interest as a future bunker fuel, with several major shipping companies and engine manufacturers investing in ammonia-capable vessel designs and propulsion systems. A commercially structured supply agreement between a major hydrogen producer and a global ammonia trader such as Yara could help accelerate the development of ammonia as a credible marine fuel, addressing one of the key barriers to adoption: reliable, large-scale supply. The abandonment of the LCEC, however, serves as a reminder that the path to a commercially viable clean energy supply chain remains complex. Project economics, regulatory frameworks, and infrastructure investment requirements continue to present significant hurdles. Air Products is expected to provide further financial detail on the LCEC charge and the Yara agreement when it reports its fiscal third-quarter results. Industry observers will be watching closely to assess how the company's revised strategy positions it within the competitive global green ammonia market.
#green ammonia#hydrogen#NEOM#Yara#marine fuels#decarbonisation#alternative fuels#Air Products#clean energy

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