Dubai Telegraph - War's impact on fertilisers stirs food producer fears

EUR -
AED 4.195799
AFN 72.545262
ALL 94.373378
AMD 420.516584
ANG 2.04552
AOA 1047.664661
ARS 1669.737728
AUD 1.638439
AWG 2.056485
AZN 1.915954
BAM 1.951192
BBD 2.306888
BDT 140.408382
BGN 1.931817
BHD 0.431912
BIF 3415.632271
BMD 1.142492
BND 1.481278
BOB 7.897348
BRL 5.893655
BSD 1.145341
BTN 108.143585
BWP 15.544485
BYN 3.204703
BYR 22392.836377
BZD 2.303589
CAD 1.618819
CDF 2587.74347
CHF 0.924013
CLF 0.026309
CLP 1035.451024
CNY 7.740154
CNH 7.746636
COP 3930.319806
CRC 519.587055
CUC 1.142492
CUP 30.276029
CVE 110.678859
CZK 24.200773
DJF 203.963878
DKK 7.474495
DOP 66.955446
DZD 152.554686
EGP 56.834273
ERN 17.137375
ETB 181.827173
FJD 2.562437
FKP 0.863375
GBP 0.862895
GEL 3.021908
GGP 0.863375
GHS 12.830461
GIP 0.863375
GMD 83.401519
GNF 10035.686741
GTQ 8.715416
GYD 239.095302
HKD 8.956735
HNL 30.470429
HRK 7.532562
HTG 149.621405
HUF 352.498091
IDR 20415.183327
ILS 3.394743
IMP 0.863375
INR 108.117981
IQD 1496.664064
IRR 1570926.021079
ISK 143.94249
JEP 0.863375
JMD 180.980659
JOD 0.809973
JPY 184.591272
KES 147.836101
KGS 99.910684
KHR 4584.258768
KMF 492.413889
KPW 1028.242887
KRW 1757.180697
KWD 0.352642
KYD 0.954488
KZT 558.256206
LAK 25191.940644
LBP 102310.127428
LKR 382.985073
LRD 208.165004
LSL 18.819309
LTL 3.37348
LVL 0.691082
LYD 7.343339
MAD 10.682125
MDL 20.141622
MGA 4832.739286
MKD 61.615135
MMK 2399.138755
MNT 4089.242301
MOP 9.248709
MRU 45.779688
MUR 54.622615
MVR 17.663374
MWK 1986.06828
MXN 19.859978
MYR 4.729575
MZN 73.000192
NAD 18.819227
NGN 1563.054356
NIO 41.849596
NOK 11.099621
NPR 173.396514
NZD 2.004319
OMR 0.439295
PAB 1.142901
PEN 4.207825
PGK 4.985548
PHP 70.18666
PKR 317.784078
PLN 4.27669
PYG 6982.421087
QAR 4.165551
RON 5.236383
RSD 117.347575
RUB 84.836309
RWF 1673.179024
SAR 4.288561
SBD 9.214242
SCR 15.148116
SDG 686.068212
SEK 11.007165
SGD 1.478321
SHP 0.852985
SLE 28.276973
SLL 23957.48288
SOS 654.557716
SRD 42.764032
STD 23647.270512
STN 24.67782
SVC 10.021778
SYP 126.281999
SZL 18.747925
THB 37.723361
TJS 10.600763
TMT 4.010146
TND 3.326363
TOP 2.750846
TRY 53.098673
TTD 7.767244
TWD 36.134608
TZS 3002.733115
UAH 51.513002
UGX 4172.146184
USD 1.142492
UYU 45.70206
UZS 13704.187802
VES 704.763427
VND 30072.66526
VUV 135.216519
WST 3.143904
XAF 655.814443
XAG 0.01805
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.087641
XCG 2.064242
XDR 0.815619
XOF 655.808704
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.655331
ZAR 18.772074
ZMK 10283.794611
ZMW 20.301498
ZWL 367.881846
  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    22.16

    -0.95%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2700

    60.34

    -0.45%

  • CMSD

    -0.2100

    22.08

    -0.95%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    18.63

    +1.23%

  • RIO

    -0.7200

    99.36

    -0.72%

  • AZN

    1.5000

    176.43

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    -0.6300

    22.65

    -2.78%

  • NGG

    1.5300

    80.97

    +1.89%

  • VOD

    -0.1800

    14.12

    -1.27%

  • GSK

    0.0700

    50.74

    +0.14%

  • BCC

    -2.1200

    72.54

    -2.92%

  • RELX

    -0.3500

    30.83

    -1.14%

  • BTI

    -0.0100

    58.9

    -0.02%

  • BP

    0.6800

    39.78

    +1.71%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.65

    -0.16%

War's impact on fertilisers stirs food producer fears
War's impact on fertilisers stirs food producer fears / Photo: Nicholas SHEARMAN, John SAEKI - AFP/File

War's impact on fertilisers stirs food producer fears

Even as Gulf tanker traffic slowly resumes, the road back to normal food production will be long and arduous, given the war's impact on fertiliser supplies, the UN has warned.

Text size:

With factories shuttered and soaring gas prices driving up production costs around the world, fertiliser prices have risen across the board and are unlikely to fall back easily.

"If the Strait of Hormuz reopened immediately, i.e. not only a ceasefire but vessels moving, the impact would be significantly positive -- but incomplete and uneven," the Food and Agriculture Organization's chief economist Maximo Torero told AFP.

"The FAO is clear that damage has already been done."

According to Argus Media, the price of urea from the Middle East has, for example, risen by 70 percent in a matter of weeks.

Gulf countries are major exporters of nitrogen fertilisers like urea -- which provides plants with nitrogen to aid green leafy growth -- as well as ammonia and phosphate.

Italy notably called last week for a "humanitarian corridor" in the Strait of Hormuz for fertiliser as Torero warned that if high prices continue, farmers would face a stark choice: "Farm the same with fewer inputs, plant less, or switch to less intensive fertiliser crops," which would reduce food supply well into 2027.

- Lasting blow to supplies -

Torero warned the bottleneck in marine traffic since the conflict began on February 28 meant even if Hormuz were to reopen immediately "infrastructure damage is not fully reversible in the short term."

According to Kpler data, around 1.9 million tonnes of fertiliser are trapped on 41 vessels, equal to 12 percent of all produce shipped out of the strait in 2024.

On March 2, the ammonia plant at the Ras Laffan refinery in Qatar was attacked. Plants have also suspended or reduced production in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Jordan and Qatar, whose Qafco complex accounted for 14 percent of global trade in urea.

Overall, about one third of urea trade has been choked off, says the FAO.

In India and Bangladesh, nitrogen fertiliser plants have slowed down, unable to cope with the soaring cost of the gas required to operate.

- Price breaks -

Even if production and shipping resumes in the Gulf, prices for nitrogen fertilisers will fall slowly and unevenly, warned Torero.

"Unlike oil, the fertiliser sector does not have internationally coordinated strategic reserves, making supply disruptions more difficult to manage.

"Repair timelines are measured in months, not days."

Purchasers have also been hit by the fact that many pre-war contracts governing prices have been suspended as producers cite "force majeure," forcing reliance on higher spot market prices.

The FAO forecasts global fertiliser prices could average 15–20 percent higher in the first half 2026.

"A meaningful decline would likely take four to eight weeks after reopening, as production ramps up and shipping reschedules," says Torero. "Prices are unlikely to return to February 2026 levels before the third quarter of 2026, if at all this year."

- Too late for some -

He added many crop planting decisions have already been missed with the Northern Hemisphere already in planting seasons, meaning those yields will not be recovered.

"It's too late" in India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Kenya, Somalia, Turkey, and Jordan, all heavily reliant on Gulf fertilizers. But perhaps not for second harvests in Asia if fertilizers arrive within 4 to 6 weeks."

He explained that "the time between a fertiliser shock and a harvest failure is measured in months. The time between a harvest failure and a food price surge is measured in months more. We are already inside that window."

- "Ripple effect" -

Prices spiked following previous disruptions during the financial crisis of 2008 and the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

"I think what makes this one potentially more critical is the number of production hubs that are involved and countries that are involved," says Sarah Marlow, global editor for fertiliser at Argus Media.

"And then the ripple effect has spread out from the Gulf to other countries, which have also been affected by a lack of raw materials, a lack of gas."

A.Hussain--DT