About 70 per cent of capacity is offline, according to Fertilizers Europe, which represents most of the continent’s producers.
“The current crisis begs for a swift and decisive action from EU and national policy makers for both energy and fertilizer market,” Jacob Hansen, director general of Fertilizers Europe, said in a statement.
This week, large producers, including Norway’s Yara International ASA and CF Industries, curtailed or halted output.
“We confirm we are reducing and stopping production of some fertilizer plants in the different EU sites and this for economic reasons,” a spokesperson for Borealis AG said in an emailed response to questions.
Russian Dependence Fertilizer makers in Europe have been hit hardest because of the region’s reliance on Russian gas. The industry must also contend with US and European Union sanctions on potash sales from Belarus and China’s move to rein in shipments. Trade in Russian nutrients has suffered from many shippers, banks and insurers self-sanctioning, as well as difficulties in servicing exports from Russia, a big supplier of every major type of crop nutrient.
As Europe becomes a net importer of fertilizer, the fallout from the supply crunch will spread. The region will start competing for scarce supplies with poorer nations, especially in Africa, where food insecurity is exacerbated by persistent droughts and conflict.
Millions of people across Africa already face starvation and a projected 7 per cent decline in global fertilizer next season, the biggest drop since 2008, could result in smaller harvests, according to the International Fertilizer Association. Smallholder farmers in fragile economies will be the most vulnerable, said Laura Cross, director of market intelligence at the association.
“Nitrogen plant shutdowns in Europe are not simply a problem in Europe,” she said. “Reduced supply on the scale seen this week not only raises the marginal cost of production of nitrogen fertilizers, but will also tighten the global market, putting pressure on plant nutrients’ availability in Europe and beyond.”
We’re already seeing prices elsewhere rise again. The price of the common nitrogen fertilizer urea in New Orleans rose over 20 per cent in weekly prices Friday, the most since March, a few weeks after the war began, according to Green Markets.