Plans abandoned for soybean crush facility in Spiritwood, ND

February 12, 2020

BY North Dakota Soybean Processors

After more than three years, $6 million of investment and thousands of hours of management time, North Dakota Soybean Processors announced that it is abandoning its efforts to build a large-scale soybean crushing facility at the Spiritwood Energy Park in Spiritwood, North Dakota.

“We made every effort to build the first farmer-owned soybean crush plant in the State of North Dakota at the Spiritwood Energy Park site,” said Bruce Hill, Minnesota farmer and NDSP president. “We had the site and plant engineering completed, construction contract bids solicited, the air permit in hand, and we had assembled commitments and term sheets with producer partnerships and debt financing totaling over $278 million to fully fund the project when the Spiritwood Energy Park Association board voted last July to terminate our site contract to construct the first farmer owned soybean crush plant in the state at the Spiritwood Energy Park. We were disappointed in the decision and we went to court to try and build a plant at that site.”

Last week, NDSP agreed with SEPA to dismiss its lawsuit with prejudice, meaning its bid to build a plant at the Spiritwood site is over.

“We are not done in our efforts,” Hill stated. “Our plant and site engineering are portable, and our air permit can be amended. And we intend to move forward with our efforts to bring the first farmer-owned soybean crush plant to the state of North Dakota, it just won’t be at Spiritwood.”

Advertisement

Advertisement

NDSP is currently a wholly-owned subsidiary of Minnesota Soybean Processors, a Minnesota cooperative with over 2,300 farmer-members residing in more than five states that owns and operates a large-scale soybean crush and feed and biodiesel production facility in southwestern Minnesota, one of only a handful of direct, farmer-owned soybean crush facilities in the U.S.

When completed, the NDSP soybean-crushing facility would support an estimated 60 jobs in the region and annually crush 42 million bushels of locally grown soybeans and produce approximately 935,000 tons of soybean meal and 475 million pounds of soybean oil for sale into domestic and export animal feed and soybean oil markets, including with respect to the soybean oil serving as a renewable feedstock for planned or existing renewable diesel refinery facilities in North Dakota and throughout the western U.S.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Related Stories

The USDA maintained its outlook for 2025-’26 soybean oil use in biofuel production in its latest World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report, released Aug. 12. The forecast for soybean oil prices was also unchanged.

Read More

U.S. soybean production for 2025 is forecast at 4.29 billion bushels, down 2% when compared to last year, according to the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service’s latest monthly Crop Production report, released Aug. 12.

Read More

As of July 2025, California’s SCFS requires renewable fuel producers using specified source feedstocks to secure attestation letters reaching back to the point of origin. This marks a significant shift in compliance expectations.

Read More

At the University of Missouri, plant biochemist Jay Thelen is using arabidopsis as a powerful model to explore ways to boost oil production — an important step toward creating more sustainable, plant-based energy sources.

Read More

Iowa farmers have a new market opportunity for their 2025 soybean crop. Landus is expanding its Clean Fuel Regulation initiative, made possible by recent policy changes expected to increase Canada's demand for liquid biofuel.

Read More

Upcoming Events

Sign up for our e-newsletter!

Advertisement

Advertisement