The Strait of Hormuz Isn’t Just an Oil Problem, It’s Now a Food Problem
The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has severely disrupted global fertilizer shipments, with over 95% of shipping halted since the conflict began. This disruption threatens a multi-country food crisis by causing fertilizer shortages, leading to smaller harvests and rising food prices, already impacting markets in Europe and Africa. Experts warn that if the blockade continues, fertilizer prices could remain elevated, exacerbating global food insecurity.
Beyond oil, the Strait of Hormuz blockade is now rippling through another critical artery of the global economy: fertilizers. Analysts warn this disruption could spiral into a multi-country food crisis well beyond the energy markets. The Iran War’s Quiet Domino Effect Around one-third of the world’s seaborne fertilizer trade moves through the Strait of Hormuz. Countries exposed to instability in the Persian Gulf export nearly half of the global urea and 30% of the ammonia, two nutrients essential for crop growth. Follow us on X to get the latest news as it happens The food crisis is comingThe three chemicals that feed the world (Sulphur, Urea,Ammonia)All heavily sourced from the Middle East.All moving through Hormuz.🌾 India massive urea AND ammonia dependency on the Gulf🇲🇦 Morocco sulphur almost entirely from Middle East🇮🇩… pic.twitter.com/adIgtWl7E4— Jack Prandelli (@jackprandelli) April 5, 2026 Since the conflict began on February 28, shipping through the strait has collapsed by more than 95%, according to UNCTAD. The chain reaction is straightforward and severe: no fertilizer → smaller harvests → spiking food prices → basic staples become unaffordable for millions. This is not a distant risk. It is already unfolding. Granular urea prices in Egypt, a major global benchmark for nitrogen fertilizers, have jumped to roughly $700 per metric ton from a pre-war range of $400 to $490. “Urea fertilizer is up 50% since the Strait closed five weeks ago. 30% of the world’s fertilizer passes through Hormuz. The Gulf produces nearly half of global urea and 30% of ammonia. European and African farm markets are already paying for it,” The Hormuz Letter posted. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) projects global fertilizer prices will average 15% to 20% higher in the first half of 2026 if the disruption persists. FAO Chief Economist Máximo Torero called the blockade one of the most severe shocks to global commodity flows in recent years. UBS economist Arend Kapteyn pro...
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