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Utah potash project gets US$14 million USDA grant

Published by , Deputy Editor
World Fertilizer,


Canada-based Sage Potash has received a US$14 million grant from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) to fund the construction of a Utah potash project, in line with recent federal efforts to boost domestic output of the fertilizer.

The grant will be used to fund and develop the Sage Plain Potash Project located in the Paradox Basin. The project has an anticipated capacity of 300 000 tpy.

According to a Sage Potash presentation, the Paradox Basin contains more than 2 billion t, or about 25% of US potash resources, but produces only 3.5% of current domestic demand.

"The USDA grant underscores the importance of increasing domestic potash capacity to serve US farmers and Sage is uniquely positioned to build incremental capacity in-market that is derisked in terms of capital, time to production and execution," president Tim Mizuno said.

In August 2025 potash was added to the draft list of critical minerals for the Department of Interior and US Geological Survey, freeing up access to federal funding. And the grant itself was approved under the Fertilizer Product Expansion Programme that focuses on increasing the production and processing of fertilizer and nutrients in the US.

Another domestic potash project, Michigan Potash, was granted federal funding in January, shortly before an executive order was issued by US President Donald Trump to include potash on the administration's list of American critical minerals.

Read the original press release by Taylor Zavala on Argus Media.

Read the article online at: https://www.worldfertilizer.com/potash/15092025/utah-potash-project-gets-us14-million-usda-grant/

 
 

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