EXHIBIT 99.2






Full Year 2020

Good morning. I'm Dan O'Brien, CEO of Flexible Solutions.

Safe Harbor provision:

The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 provides a "Safe Harbor"
for forward-looking statements. Certain of the statements contained herein,
which are not historical facts, are forward looking statements with respect to
events, the occurrence of which involve risks and uncertainties. These
forward-looking statements may be impacted, either positively or negatively, by
various factors. Information concerning potential factors that could affect the
company is detailed from time to time in the company's reports filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission.

Welcome to the FSI conference call for FY 2020.

Prior to discussion of our financials, I'd like to update our corporate
condition and product lines along with what, in our opinion, might occur over
the next two quarters.

Covid virus:  The NanoChem  Subsidiary,  the ENP  Subsidiary and the Florida LLC
investment are all engaged in producing for the agriculture  and/or the cleaning
products sectors. Therefore, we are considered essential services and are likely
to remain  so even if  restrictions  are  reinstated.  Production  and sales are
continuing to meet customer  orders.  We reduced our inventory and increased our
cash position in 2020 by ordering less inventory  than we consumed.  This tactic
was successful and we feel that we now have the right level of inventory to suit
the risks of covid while still having the ability to service our customers.

Our NanoChem division:  NCS represents more than 1/2 of the revenue of FSI. This
division makes thermal poly-aspartic acid, called TPA for short, a biodegradable
polymer with many valuable  uses.  NCS also  manufactures  SUN 27(TM) and N Savr
30(TM) which are used to reduce nitrogen fertilizer loss from soil.

TPA is used in  agriculture  to  significantly  increase crop yield.  It acts by
slowing  crystal  growth  between  fertilizer  ions and  other  ions in the soil
resulting in the fertilizer remaining available longer for the plants to use.

TPA is also a biodegradable way of treating oilfield water to prevent pipes from
plugging with mineral scale. TPA's effect is that it prevents the scaling out of
minerals  that  are  part of the  water  fraction  of oil as it  exits  the rock
formation. Scale must be prevented to keep the oil recovery pipes from clogging.

SUN 27(TM) and N Savr 30(TM) are our nitrogen conservation products. Nitrogen is
a  critical  fertilizer  but  it  can  be  lost  through  bacterial   breakdown,
evaporation and soil runoff.

SUN 27(TM) is used to conserve  nitrogen from attack by soil  bacterial  enzymes
while N Savr 30(TM) is directed toward reducing  nitrogen loss through  leaching
and evaporation.

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ENP  Division:  ENP is  focused  on  sales  into the  greenhouse,  turf and golf
markets,  while, our NCS sales are into row crop agriculture - two very distinct
markets.  The  strong  quarters  for ENP are 2 and 3 to match the US spring  and
summer.  FY 2020  growth in both  revenue  and profit was good.  ENP expects the
level of growth in in 2021 to be similar to 2020.  The Florida  LLC  investment:
This  investment was  profitable as usual.  The LLC increased its revenue nearly
30%.  This had the effect of increasing  our NCS division  sales to them and our
share of the LLC profits substantially.  The Company is focused on international
sales into multiple countries all of which are facing different covid issues and
responding  in varied ways.  The large  number of variables  prevents any useful
prediction for FY 2021 except that the LLC management  expects continued growth.
For Q1 2021 some  customers have made their spring orders so late that shipments
will occur in Q2. No revenue loss is anticipated but  recognition  will be in Q2
rather than Q1.

Strategic  investment in Lygos: In December,  FSI invested  $500,000 in Lygos in
return for equity.  Lygos is using the  investment to continue  development of a
microbial  route to aspartic acid using corn sugar as a feedstock.  FSI would be
the major user of aspartic acid derived this way and believes  that  sustainable
aspartic acid would allow us to obtain large new customers and develop  valuable
new products.  Lygos' scientific team have already successfully  developed other
organic acids from sustainable  feedstock and are recognized as one of the world
leaders in synthetic  biology by their peers in the industry  and  academia.  We
have high  confidence  in their  ability to achieve  sustainable  aspartic  acid
through a fermentation route.

Q1 2021

TPA,  SUN 27(TM) and N Savr 30(TM) for  agricultural  use have peak uptake in Q1
and Q2. As we  suspected,  ordering  in 2021 is not the same as in 2020 and some
orders  are early  while  others are later than  usual.  We expect  that some Q1
orders will ship in Q2 and be recognized in the Q they ship in.

Oil, gas and  industrial  sales of TPA are expected to be flat to slightly up in
Q1 2021. Like  agriculture,  our sales to cleaning  products and water treatment
are  considered  essential,  leaving only O&G as a market  vertical at risk from
covid.  The  risk  in O&G is  declining  as the  vaccines  are  distributed  and
economies prepare to open.

Tariffs: Since Sept 30, 2018, many of our raw materials imported from China have
included  a 10%  additional  tariff  which  rose to 25% in  2019.  US  customers
received  price  increases  from  us  as  this  inventory  entered   production.
International  customers are not charged the tariffs because we are applying for
the  export  rebates  available  to  recover  the  tariffs.  As  a  result,  the
accumulating  tariff payments to the Government are affecting our cost of goods,
our cash flow and our profits negatively until the rebates are received. Rebates
are very complicated to apply for and can take many months to arrive.  The total
dollar  amount  due back to us now  exceeds  $1 MM and  continues  to  increase.
Changes in customs  categories  in Q3 2020 have  resulted  in another of our raw
materials  being  added to the  tariff  list,  increasing  the strain on us. The
rebates will increase profitability and cash flow while decreasing cost of goods
for the future quarters in which the rebates are received.  In my Q1 2020 speech
I expressed  comfort  that we would begin to see rebates in Q2 or early in Q3. I
based  this on the fact that we filed our  template  and  request  for our first
rebate  in  mid-May  2020.  As of Aug 14,  there had been no  response  from the
government  except  an  excuse  that  "employees  are  not  in the  office".  In
September, we were told that they had lost our file and instructed us to refile.
Because  files are  examined in order of receipt  and there is a 30-day  payment
delay even after  approval,  we did not receive  rebates in 2020.  We received a
request for small changes to our  application  in early January and responded in
24 hours. We are still waiting for the government's response to our changes.

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Shipping and  Inventory:  Ocean shipping and land transport in the US are taking
much  longer  than  usual.  6 weeks from PO to  receipt of product  has become 3
months in some cases.  The Suez Canal  problem  will  exacerbate  this for a few
weeks.  We are doing our best to cope with shipping issues by ordering far ahead
but we warn that some disruption will be unavoidable.

New  Equipment:  2.5 years ago, we began the  purchase and  installation  of new
equipment that will allow us to make additional products and increase sales. The
machinery went live in December and will contribute to sales and profits in 2021
and onward.  Revenue from this  equipment is expected to be significant by early
2022.

Highlights of the financial results:

Sales for the year increased 14% to $31.4  million,  compared with $27.4 million
for FY 2019.

Profits:  The  result is a gain of $2.98  million or 24 cents per share in 2020,
compared to a gain of $1.91 million or 16 cents per share, in 2019. We attribute
the improvement to increased  sales and lower costs for travel and  professional
fees along with no bad debt charge.

Operating  Cash Flow:  This non-GAAP  number is useful to show our progress with
non-cash  items  removed for clarity.  For 2020 it was $4.51 million or 37 cents
per share compared to $2.62 million or 22 cents per share.

Long term debt: We repaid the $500 thousand convertible note with cash in April
2020 and reduced our principal on our historic loans by more than $1 MM during
the year. We took on $500 thousand in PPP loans and $450 thousand in a mortgage
for the land and factory owned through ENP realty. Although it looks like we
ended the year with similar long-term debt, once the new asset is accounted for
and the PPP is forgiven our improved position is obvious.

Working capital is adequate for all our purposes and is increasing  continuously
as we book  retained  profit  from  sales.  We also have a line of  credit  with
Midland  States Bank.  We are  confident  that we can execute our plans with our
existing  capital.  The  purchase  of ENP in 2018 was funded by a term loan from
Harris bank [now carried by Midland] and a $1 MM convertible  debenture taken by
the seller.  One half the  debenture was converted to 200,000 FSI shares in 2019
while,  as noted above,  the remainder was paid back in cash. The LLC investment
in  January  2019 was made  with  cash on hand  provided  by FSL,  our  Canadian
operating  company.  The equity investment in Lygos was funded with cash on hand
from the same source.

The text of this  speech will be  available  as an 8K filing on  www.sec.gov  by
Monday,  April 4th.  Email or fax copies can be  requested  from Jason  Bloom at
Jason@flexiblesolutions.com. Thank you, the floor is open for questions.



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