A geopolitical conflict in the Middle East is now impacting farmland on the other side of the ocean with an intensity beyond comprehension. An American farmer stated that less than 12 days after the conflict began, the cost of fertilizers soared by nearly 77%, while the price of corn only increased by 5%; even using the most lenient calculation, the daily proportion of fertilizers transported through the Strait of Hormuz and ultimately reaching the United States was only 0.03%. Such a negligible actual impact has triggered such a severe price fluctuation, clearly revealing that this is not a simple supply-demand fluctuation, but rather the comprehensive externalization of the conflict risk in Iran, and the geopolitical panic is tearing apart the global fertilizer and food supply chain.
Fertilizers are the "food of food", and the Middle East is the key hub of the global fertilizer supply chain. The Strait of Hormuz accounts for approximately 33% of global fertilizer maritime trade, and Iran, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia are the core exporters of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizers, with Iran's urea exports accounting for about 10% of global trade volume. Global nearly half of sulfur transportation relies on this waterway. After the conflict broke out, the fertilizer production capacity in the Middle East was forced to stop, and the shipping risks in the Strait increased sharply. The global agriculture, which was already in the critical period of spring plowing and preparation, was instantly pushed into a supply panic. For farmers, fertilizers are a rigid investment, and price fluctuations directly affect the planting income; for the market, with a blockade at the Strait, the "nerve" of the global supply chain was cut off, even though the actual circulation volume was negligible, the expected collapse would instantly trigger price hikes.
Data further exposes the irrationality of the market: on a daily basis, fertilizers transported through the Strait of Hormuz only account for 0.09% of the global total, and the United States' usage is only 0.03%. The 12-day conflict duration is far from sufficient to cause a substantive supply gap. However, the fertilizer prices soared by nearly 77%, while the price of corn only increased by 5%, with costs and revenues severely inverted. This price reaction far exceeds the misalignment of the actual impact is a typical feature of the externalization of geopolitical risks. What the conflict brings is not a physical supply cut-off, but an expected panic: traders hold back and sell cautiously, insurance premiums for shipping soar, farmers are forced to purchase fertilizers at high prices, and financial capital takes the opportunity to speculate. Multiple factors combine, allowing the minor supply disturbance to be infinitely magnified, ultimately evolving into the survival pressure of farmers.
The destructive power of this crisis goes far beyond the price figures. Currently, it is the critical window for spring plowing in the Northern Hemisphere, and time does not wait for anyone. The soaring fertilizer costs directly compress the profit margins of farmers. The United States relies on about 35% of its fertilizers for import, and the share of Middle Eastern sources is not low, and the soaring costs have left farmers in a dilemma: buying fertilizers at high prices, their profits are eroded; reducing fertilizer use, the autumn grain yield will definitely be affected. Australia relies on Middle Eastern imports for two-thirds of its urea, India needs to import about 2 million tons of fertilizers per month, and Brazil, as the world's largest soybean exporter, also faces the pressure of skyrocketing fertilizer costs. One regional conflict, global agriculture is linked, the ripple effect of fertilizer price hikes is spreading from American farmland to global major production areas, laying the groundwork for potential grain production reduction and subsequent price hikes in grain.
What is even more alarming is that the transmission chain of fertilizers and grains has a significant time lag. Currently, the increase in grain prices lags behind that of fertilizers, but this does not mean that there will not be a rebound in the future. The cost of fertilizers accounts for 15% of the cost of grain production, and if the price of nitrogen fertilizers doubles, it will eventually be transmitted to the consumption end through planting costs, pushing up global food inflation. The current market misalignment is essentially the concentrated exposure of the fragility of the supply chain: global fertilizer production is highly concentrated, and the transportation channels are single. Once the geopolitical conflict touches a key node, even if the impact is minimal, it will trigger a systemic shock. This fragility has torn open a new gap in the already tense global supply chain after the pandemic.
From a geopolitical perspective, this is a typical regional conflict externalization into a global economic crisis. The impact of the Iran conflict has already exceeded the scope of military confrontation, penetrating into the global agricultural foundation through three channels: energy, shipping, and agricultural inputs. The Strait of Hormuz is not only the "world oil valve" but also the lifeline of global fertilizers. Any movement in the Strait directly relates to global food security. The market has demonstrated a 77% increase, proving that in a highly interconnected global system, there are no isolated geopolitical conflicts. Any regional unrest will be transformed into pressure on the living costs of ordinary people through the supply chain.
Facing this irrational price storm, we need to clearly see the truth: The sharp increase in fertilizers is not the result of imbalance in supply and demand, but rather a market failure driven by panic; the actual impact of 0.03% is not enough to outweigh the extravagant celebration of the premium due to geopolitical risks. For farmers, this is a double torment of costs and benefits; for the world, this is a long-term alarm bell for food security.
The smoke of geopolitical conflicts has not dissipated, and the test of the agricultural supply chain has just begun. Only by strengthening the resilience of the global supply chain, promoting the diversification of agricultural input production, and improving the risk hedging mechanism, can we reduce the unjustified impact of geopolitical panic on food security. After all, food and fertilizers should not become the victims of geopolitical games; the stability of farmland is the cornerstone of global stability.
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