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For months, warnings about fertilizer shortages were treated as if they were overblown. Not anymore.
It seems things have gotten bad enough that President Trump has declared a national emergency over America’s fertilizer supply.
The White House is temporarily lifting tariffs on phosphate fertilizer imported from Morocco to help farmers, but that’s not a solution. It’s an admission that the supply chain is already breaking down.
The administration wants Americans to believe this is simply about getting more fertilizer into the country. It’s not, though.
The real problem is that fertilizer production depends on far more than phosphate. Sulfur, ammonia, natural gas, and shipping routes are all essential pieces of the puzzle, and many of those supply lines were disrupted after the conflict surrounding the Strait of Hormuz escalated.
This is impacting everyday people.
You can’t interrupt the global supply of fertilizer ingredients and expect grocery store shelves to remain untouched. Farmers pay more, crop production suffers, and food prices climb. Eventually, consumers pay the price.
Will Trump’s declaration make a positive impact?
Not really.
Emergency declarations don’t manufacture fertilizer. They don’t reopen shipping lanes. They don’t magically restore supply chains that have already been damaged. What they do is simply acknowledge that the crisis is here.
Anyone paying attention knew this was coming. Yet instead of addressing the underlying supply chain problems, the government waited until declaring an emergency was the only option.
So now we wait… because today’s fertilizer shortage will become next year’s famine.