Skip to main content
institutional access

You are connecting from
Lake Geneva Public Library,
please login or register to take advantage of your institution's Ground News Plan.

Published loading...Updated

Iran War and China Export Curbs Drive Up Fertilizer Costs for U.S. Farmers

China’s export clampdown and the Iran war have pushed nitrogen fertilizer prices up 28%, leaving 70% of U.S. farmers unable to afford enough.

  • Fertilizer prices jumped from around $400 to nearly $600 per ton early in the Iran War, with China, which supplies 10% of global exports, tightening curbs in April, pressuring U.S. farmers during planting season.
  • The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which handles 30% of global ammonia exports, exacerbates market consolidation; Mosaic alone controls 75% to 80% of phosphate production, leaving farmers vulnerable to supply shocks.
  • Diesel costs rose 54.4% to $5.67 per gallon as of May 14, according to Brown University, while 86 American farms filed for Chapter 12 bankruptcy in the first quarter of 2026.
  • The Trump administration suspended the Jones Act for 150 days to improve fertilizer logistics, though critics argue increased nitrogen production would serve 'industrial demands' rather than farmers' immediate needs.
  • Experts warn high fertilizer prices may persist through at least 2027, while persistent drought conditions threaten yields and consumers in the United States could face price shocks in bread aisles later this year.
Insights by Ground AI

15 Articles

Think freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribe

Bias Distribution

  • 54% of the sources lean Left
54% Left

Factuality Info Icon

To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

Ownership

Info Icon

To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage

WHO-DT broke the news on Friday, May 15, 2026.
Too Big Arrow Icon
Sources are mostly out of (0)

Similar News Topics

News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal