• Please be sure to read the rules and adhere to them. Some banned members have complained that they are not spammers. But they spammed us. Some even tried to redirect our members to other forums. Duh. Be smart. Read the rules and adhere to them and we will all get along just fine. Cheers. :beer: Link to the rules: https://www.forumsforums.com/threads/forum-rules-info.2974/

More Inflation coming for food: Midwest Farmers face skyrocketing fertilizer prices

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
Farmers in the midwest states are finishing their planting and doing so with fertilizer that has skyrocketed in price. Some areas of the world are not producing wheat (war) other areas can't afford to buy fertilizer so planting marginalize land is not happening this year because it is not worth the cost of the fertilizer.

Crops will be harvested months into the future and those crops will likely have lower harvests.

Food prices are simply supply and demand. Demand is not dropping but supply is dropping.



Spiking fertilizer costs squeeze Midwest farmers

Price of some agricultural fertilizers has skyrocketed as much as 60% over last year’s prices.

Things are getting tougher for the nation’s breadbasket, a predicament that will likely ripple through the nation’s economy.
In addition to 40-year-high inflation and new records set nearly every day at the gasoline pump the past two weeks, the price of some agricultural fertilizers has skyrocketed as much as 60% over last year’s prices.
“An average 2,500-acre corn and soybean farm has seen their fertilizer bill increase $175,000 in the last year alone from $250,000 to $425,000,” Loren Koeman, lead economist/manager Industry, Conservation, and Regulatory Relations for the Michigan Farm Bureau, told The Center Square.
That’s extremely bad news for farmers, but as well grocery store customers who purchase such dietary staples as meat, dairy and bread.
The Michigan Legislature has sent a message to Washington lawmakers to help bring down the costs of agricultural fertilizer. Rep. Steve Carra, R-Three Rivers, authored House Resolution 205. The resolution urges the U.S. Congress, federal agencies, and state departments to immediately address the ongoing fertilizer price increases and shortages that are severely impacting Michigan farmers.
The Michigan House of Representatives approved the resolution, and sent it to the U.S. Congress.
“Farmers play a vital role in Michigan’s history, along with today’s culture and economy,” Carra, a member of the House Committee on Agriculture, said in a statement. “There are about 10 million acres of farmland in Michigan, and we are home to over 47,000 farms. That’s millions of acres of farmland needing to be fertilized.”
According to Koeman, the major factors in fertilizer price increases are:
War in Ukraine has impacted supply of fertilizer products from Russia and Belarus due to sanctions.
Increased energy prices directly impact nitrogen fertilizers, which are made from natural gas.
Higher shipping costs due to both increased energy costs, labor costs and limited availability of ships and rail. Fertilizer is bulky and often needs to be shipped long distances from where it is mined to where it is used.
Consolidation in the fertilizer industry. For example, only two companies control over 90% of the U.S. potash market. Fertilizer producers are making record profits. For example, Nutrien’s last 12-months profits are up almost 10-fold over 2020 profits.
Modern farmers have increased fertilizer efficiency, optimizing use with technology such as GPS to test soils and manage individual growing zones within fields, Koeman explained. This makes it difficult to further reduce fertilizer use without reducing yields.
In the short run, farmers' profits are reduced by the high fertilizer prices. In the long run farmers need to make a profit to stay in business, so higher fertilizer costs will need to lead to higher food prices, Koeman said.
It’s not all bad news for farmers.
“This year crop farmers have been largely able to offset the higher cost of fertilizer with higher crop prices, driven by the supply disruption in Ukraine,” Koeman said. “Farmers worry, however, that fertilizer prices are likely to stay high even as crop prices fall back to more normal levels, squeezing profits.”
Theresa Sisung, Michigan Farm Bureau industry relations specialist, agrees with Koeman.
“Thanks to strong crop prices, farmers are hoping to offset some of their additional input expenses with increased sales prices and good yields,” Sisung told The Center Square. “Farmers are sharpening their pencils and being diligent with crop sales, and with the help of Mother Nature there is still opportunity to have a positive income this year. There is greater concern about future profitability if input prices remain high and we see crop prices begin to decline.”
 
Intentional and planned this way?
I believe more the law of "Unintended Consequences"

The greenies want high gas prices to get people to buy electric cars so they enact a bunch of policies that cause gas to go up but forget to take the world into account. Much of our nitrogen fertilizer comes from natural gas, which comes from the drilling oil wells. International conflicts probably were ignored but the consequences of those to both the food and the fertilizer supplies is a huge contributing factor.

And they do all this stuff while at the same time taking nuclear and coal plants off line which increases our need for natural gas plants. They turn food into fuel, which cuts the food supply, and they extend it into summer months which does more to cut food supply.

Literally crazy policies, all for the sake of being green.
 
Top