Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Iran Conflict 2026
27MAR

War leaves US farms 2m tonnes short

2 min read
14:13UTC
ConflictDeveloping

The Fertilizer Institute projects US farmers will be short 2 million tonnes of urea this spring, with urea prices up 30% since the war began. Some farmers cannot obtain supply at any price. 1 Spring planting is underway now. The shortage is not a forecast; it is a current constraint on fields being sowed this week.

The domestic economic pressure from this conflict has been building. US gasoline had already reached $3.98 per gallon , up 36% from pre-war levels. US diesel previously topped $5 per gallon . The fertiliser shortage adds a production-cost dimension to the energy-cost dimension: fuel to run farm equipment costs more, fertiliser to grow crops costs more or is unavailable, and transport costs have increased across the supply chain.

Urea is synthesised from natural gas. Iran and Russia together account for approximately 25% of global urea exports. The war has simultaneously disrupted Iranian production via strikes on petrochemical facilities and Russian supply chains via shipping insurance complications in the Gulf. The shortage is structural, not speculative: the 2 million tonne shortfall represents approximately 15% of annual US nitrogen fertiliser demand.

Corn planted without adequate nitrogen produces thin, pale stalks and reduced yields. The Fertilizer Institute's projection implies yields on affected acres could fall 10-20%, with downstream effects on global grain prices by autumn 2026. No administration response has been announced. The political dimension is acute: rural America, which supported the war at higher rates than urban centres per Pew data , is the constituency absorbing the most direct economic blow from a conflict it disproportionately endorsed.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

American farmers need fertiliser for spring planting right now. Most of it comes by ship through the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran controls. The war has disrupted those shipments. If fertiliser does not arrive in time, food prices rise for everyone.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

US agriculture's dependency on imported fertiliser via a single maritime chokepoint.

The spring planting window is biologically fixed. Farmers who miss it cannot recover the yield later in the season.

First Reported In

Update #49 · Hormuz toll into law; Tangsiri killed

Siasat / Al Jazeera· 27 Mar 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Oil market and P&I insurers
Oil market and P&I insurers
Brent cleared $87 intraday only once CENTCOM's blockade became physical rather than declared, even though P&I Clubs had already excluded Hormuz war risk a week earlier on 7 July: capital hedged ahead of enforcement, but prices moved only after it.
UAE reporting
UAE reporting
UAE reporting placed the Omani tanker deaths at one seafarer against the International Maritime Agency's count of two, the first time in this war that a Gulf state's casualty figures have diverged from an international monitor's.
Jordan
Jordan
Iranian strikes reached Jordan again on 14 July as part of the Gulf-wide retaliation for the Hormuz blockade, extending the conflict's geographic footprint to a state with no direct stake in the strait itself.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Bahrain sounded air-raid sirens on 14 July during Iran's Gulf-wide retaliation, the same day CENTCOM's blockade order and fourth night of strikes pushed the conflict's physical reach into the wider Gulf littoral.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait intercepted Iranian missiles and drones on 14 July as Tehran's blockade retaliation reached Gulf states beyond Iran's immediate shoreline, confirming Kuwaiti airspace now sits inside Iran's retaliatory envelope.
Oman
Oman
Oman absorbed the war's first tanker casualties in its own waters on 14 July, with two supertankers disabled and seafarers killed, putting the sultanate's shipping lanes directly in the path of the blockade fight for the first time.