Could nitrogen shortage put food security at risk?

Glacier FarmMedia – The head of the world’s leading fertilizer company is worried that food production will falter as nitrogen fertilizer supplies tighten.

“We are deeply concerned about the state of global agriculture,” Svein Tore Holsether, president of Yara International, said during the company’s third quarter 2022 conference call.

Fertilizer supplies are being squeezed as manufacturers curtail production due to sky-high natural gas prices. That is happening amid what Holsether described as an “escalating food crisis.”

Why it matters: Nitrogen is critical for many of the staple crops that feed the world’s population.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service estimates there are 1.3 billion food-insecure people in 77 low- and middle-income countries in 2022, up 10 per cent from last year due to COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine.

Farmers around the world will likely be lowering their application rates of nitrogen fertilizer due to high prices of the vital crop input.

“The world’s food supply cannot be maintained without nitrogen,” said Holsether.

Global grain yields would drop an estimated 43 per cent in one year if there was no nitrogen applied to the soil, according to Yara.

That is obviously not going to happen but there will be cutbacks on how much is applied due to tightening supplies.

Production is being sharply curtailed in the European Union, which supplies 15 per cent of the world’s finished nitrogen fertilizer products. About half of the EU’s production capacity has been idled due to Russian restrictions on natural gas supplies to the region.

Spot gas prices in the EU were up 248 per cent compared to the third quarter of 2021.

“Yara’s markets have never been more challenging than what we have seen in the past 12 months with European production costs reaching an all-time high,” said Holsether.

The cost of producing urea topped US$1,500 per tonne at times during the third quarter.

Yara operated at 57 per cent of its production capacity in Europe in the third quarter, down from its more typical rate of 80 to 90 per cent. The curtailments have taken 1.7 million tonnes of Yara’s ammonia and 900,000 tonnes of its finished fertilizer production capacity off the market.

As a result, the company’s fertilizer deliveries were down 26 per cent compared to the third quarter of 2021, including a 35 per cent drop in the Americas.

“In addition, there is also less supply available from China and several other locations as well,” said Holsether.

Fertilizer inventories are at historically low levels in Europe and there is a risk of nitrogen fertilizer shortages and price spikes this winter, especially if natural gas availability further deteriorates.

“The world needs all the fertilizer at its disposal,” he said.

However, he cautioned the EU against importing fertilizer from Russia to make up for the lost European production.

“In the long-term, it is critical for Europe to reduce our dependency on Russia, not only within energy, but also within fertilizer and food,” said Holsether.

Russia supplies 14 per cent of the world’s urea, 21 per cent of its potash, 23 per cent of its ammonia and 46 per cent of its ammonium nitrate.

Yara wants the EU to accelerate its use of renewable energy and to secure continued access to natural gas for the fertilizer sector from other suppliers, so that the industry is less reliant on Russian natural gas.

– This article was originally published at The Western Producer.

Source: Farmtario.com

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