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HomeUSUS Farmers Concerned Over Fertilizer Prices Amid Iran Conflict

US Farmers Concerned Over Fertilizer Prices Amid Iran Conflict

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BISMARCK, N.D. — Tennessee farmer Todd Littleton is bracing for a $100,000 increase in his fertilizer expenses this season, a 40% jump from last year’s costs, attributed to the ongoing conflict in Iran. This unexpected financial burden has him scrambling to find ways to manage the additional expense.

“We’re already under significant financial stress, and this couldn’t have come at a worse time,” said Littleton, who hails from Gibson County in northwest Tennessee and is a third-generation farmer. “After suffering substantial losses in recent years, we’re already on shaky ground, and now with these rising input costs, it’s like we’re grasping at straws.”

Littleton, who cultivates corn, soybeans, and wheat, is just one of many farmers nationwide facing unexpectedly high fertilizer costs this spring. Nitrogen-based fertilizers are crucial, particularly for corn, which is one of the United States’ top crops. Corn plays a vital role in feeding livestock and is a key component in ethanol production, which fuels many American vehicles.

Although farmers have long voiced concerns over high fertilizer prices, the situation has worsened since the U.S. and Israel launched an attack on Iran on February 28. This action has disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical passageway for 20% of the world’s oil and natural gas. The disruption has not only driven up fuel prices, essential for fertilizer production, but also severely restricted the export of nitrogen fertilizers from the Persian Gulf and limited access to necessary fertilizer components.

The American Farm Bureau Federation reports that approximately 15% of the U.S.’s fertilizer imports come from the Middle East. The region is also responsible for producing about half of the world’s urea supply and 30% of its ammonia, both vital ingredients for fertilizer.

“When the ports started raising their nitrogen prices due to the conflict due to shipping concerns, that directly affects me here on the farm,” Littleton said.

The extra costs are hard to absorb, coming after several bad years when crop prices were down even as expenses kept climbing, Littleton said.

Some farmers may not find fertilizer

But it could be worse, as some farmers may not be able to obtain fertilizer at any price, said Zippy Duvall, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation.

“We’re being told that many of our farmers that haven’t preordered their fertilizer and paid for it may not even obtain the fertilizer that they’re going to need during the season or for spring planting,” Duvall said. “That’s why this situation is so serious.”

Harry Ott, a cotton, corn and peanut farmer who also leads the South Carolina farm bureau, said there isn’t enough fertilizer stockpiled in warehouses to meet demand in the coming months.

“It is a really dire situation that our farmers facing,” Ott said.

Experts say don’t expect a quick fix

Even before the latest price increase, other factors in the last several years have led to high fertilizer prices, starting with the war between Ukraine and Russia, which blocked access to raw materials and increased natural gas prices. China also cut phosphate exports as it focused more on domestic needs.

The latest factors worsened those existing supply issues, which means that even if the Iran war was resolved, fertilizer prices likely won’t quickly fall, said Jacqui Fatka, a farm supply economist for creditor CoBank.

“There’s going to be a tail to this to get everything turned back on, sent back out,” Fatka said.

And then there is the time it takes for shipments from the Middle East to reach the U.S. — typically 30 to 45 days to reach the Port of New Orleans.

Some fertilizer is already stored in the U.S. and can meet demand amid the shortage of Middle East imports, but at some point that supply will run short.

“We don’t quite know how it’s going to shake out,” said Nancy Martinez, director of public policy, trade and biotechnology for the National Corn Growers Association.

Nitrogen- and phosphate-based fertilizers are largely produced domestically, which helps a little bit, said Anne Villamil, a professor of economics at the University of Iowa.

“But again, energy prices are an input, and so even if you’re producing it in the U.S., if the cost of your inputs goes up, then it’s going to be an increase in price to the farmers who want to buy it,” Villamil said.

Soaring oil prices could result in higher food prices, given the increased cost of diesel needed to transport products to grocery stores and petroleum products used in plastic packaging, said Chad Hart, an economics professor at Iowa State University.

However, the increased fertilizer prices shouldn’t significantly lead to grocery store increases even as they put a crimp in farmers’ profits. That’s because on-farm costs are only a small part of what consumers pay at the supermarket.

Efforts to curb the hit on farmers from costly fertilizer

The Trump administration said it has taken steps to ease the cost of fertilizer, including moving to increase fertilizer imports from Venezuela, which U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins called “a huge step that puts farm security and farmers first.”

The Department of Agriculture also notes it previously announced $12 billion in one-time payments to help farmers offset losses primarily due to tariffs imposed by the Trump administration. In a statement, the USDA also said it has provided more than $30 billion in additional aid to farmers since January 2025, and the agency noted its support for a more competitive fertilizer marketplace that would ultimately lower prices.

Fatka, of CoBank, said the $12 billion doesn’t go far for farmers with a payment of $44 per corn acre when the USDA estimates about $900 per acre for cost of production for the average U.S. farmer.

Still, farm bankruptcies remain rare, with only 315 last year — a tiny percentage of the nearly 1.9 million farms nationally. And prices for the nation’s two largest crops — corn and soybeans — have been climbing recently.

Tom Waters, who farms about 5,000 acres (2,023 hectares) of corn, soybeans and wheat east of Kansas City, said the increase of fertilizer prices along with other costs makes it tough to make a profit when crop prices are so low.

“The margins get smaller and smaller so we just have to really work hard to trim our costs and be as frugal as we can be but still provide the soil and crop what it needs to grow and produce,” Waters said.

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