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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

East Yorkshire site confirmed for Yara's new £50m specialist fertiliser facility

Howden's Ozone Business Park to host huge new plant as deal agreed with developer Horncastle Group and contractors appointed

How Yara's new production facility will look at Ozone Business Park, Howden.

Global giant Yara International is to build the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s largest specialist fertiliser manufacturing plant in East Yorkshire, in what will be a £50 million investment.

The Norwegian company has agreed a deal with leading regional developer Horncastle Group to locate on its Ozone Business Park in Howden. It had revealed the huge investment in the county in May, stating it would be close to existing operations at Pocklington.

Now confirmed, it will mark the start of Phase Two of the development - described as a premier logistics and distribution base - which is already home to DHL, DPD and Warburtons.

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The 295,669 sq ft build will be delivered by West Yorkshire-headquartered Caddick Construction as part of a £28 million contract. It includes a state-of-the-art manufacturing plant, warehouses, and offices that will enable Yara to double production of its YaraVita speciality crop nutrition products and biostimulants, which are vital to achieving future food security and mitigating climate change.

David Tomkinson, operations director of Yara º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and son of John Tomkinson, the founder of Phosyn, said: “What began in Yorkshire in 1967 as Phosyn, is set to stay in Yorkshire for the next exciting leg of the Yara journey.

"Yara was put in contact with Horncastle who had already completed a development of Ozone One Business Park at Howden and were in the process of planning Ozone Two. This opportunity presented enough land for Yara to realise its new Global YaraVita Plant, in addition it offered improved access to logistical networks. Horncastle assisted Yara in the design and civils of the new plant and will continue to support the development during its construction.”

Despite the scale, no new jobs will be created, with all existing roles maintained. Virtually all the plant’s products will be exported to markets around the world, helping to meet a rising global demand from growers to improve crop health and increase yields. It comes 10 months after Yara closed its Harvest House head office in Grimsby, moving it to the Pocklington site.