By Kjetil Malkenes Hovland

OSLO--Torgeir Kvidal, chief executive officer of Yara International ASA (YAR.OS), said Friday that the company favored a controlled shutdown of the Lifeco fertilizer joint venture in Libya, amid deteriorating security and a lack of natural gas supplies.

"Current gas production in the country is so low that we are operating below 50% capacity, and that means negative cash from the plant," Mr. Kvidal told The Wall Street Journal in an interview. "If this continues or gets worse--and developments in Libya haven't been positive for the security--it's just a matter of time before we run out of cash."

Mr. Kvidal said Yara had asked the other Lifeco partners, The National Oil Corporation of Libya and the Libyan Investment Authority, each with 25% stakes in the joint venture, to mothball the plant, but that the partners wanted operations to continue. Yara's Lifeco partners weren't immediately available to comment.

"With the current situation, financially and security-wise, we would have wanted a controlled shutdown of the plant," Mr. Kvidal said. "We have requested upgrades in the security of the staff."

The Norwegian fertilizer producer paid $225 million for a 50% stake in the Lifeco plant in northeastern Libya in 2009, but has written down its value to $18 million. The plant was closed for more than a year between 2011 and 2012 amid a civil war, and for several months last year amid a blockade by a local militia group.

Yara's first-quarter net profit dropped 59% on the year to 729 million Norwegian kroner ($93.22 million), amid a NOK929 million write-down of Lifeco and a currency loss of NOK1.8 billion due to the effect of a stronger dollar on the company's dollar-denominated debt.

However, the stronger dollar has a positive effect on Yara's revenues, and also reduces the company's fixed costs in euros, Brazilian reals and Norwegian kroner, Mr. Kvidal said. The dollar lifted Yara's first-quarter earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization by roughly NOK1 billion compared with a year earlier, he said.

"The NOK1.8 billion [currency loss] is a one-off effect due to changes in the [dollar] exchange rate," he said. "But given that change in the exchange rate, you'll get the same [positive] effect on EBITDA quarter after quarter."

The company also benefits from falling prices for natural gas, a key input to its fertilizer production. Yara's European energy costs were NOK1.3 billion lower on the year in the first quarter, and are expected to drop by another NOK800 million over the coming six months, it said.

Write to Kjetil Malkenes Hovland at kjetilmalkenes.hovland@wsj.com

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