U.S. farmers face supply shortages, higher costs after Hurricane Ida
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[September 22, 2021] By
P.J. Huffstutter and Mark Weinraub
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Troy Walker's phone
will not stop ringing at his Kansas farm cooperative, with growers
needing fertilizer for their wheat fields in the coming months.
In Kentucky, corn and soybean farmer Caleb Ragland said shelves at his
local farm supplier are often bare of weed killer glyphosate and other
crop chemicals. He expects the situation could get worse.
Bayer's glyphosate manufacturing plant in Louisiana remains shut after
Hurricane Ida slammed the Gulf Coast in late August, further
complicating logistical and supply chain problems that had already
tightened global supplies of fertilizers and chemicals.
"Ida was like a heavyweight boxer going 15 rounds, and threw a hard
upper-cut at the farmer," said Ragland, a ninth generation corn and
soybean farmer in Magnolia, Kentucky. "Things were already bad. Ida made
it worse."
Ida disrupted grain and soybean shipments from the Gulf Coast, which
accounts for about 60% of U.S. exports, at a time global crop supplies
are tight and demand from China is strong.
Now, the storm's ripple effects are hampering production and movement of
some fertilizers and crop chemicals ahead of U.S. harvest. This is
straining an agricultural and food supply chain already battered by
trade and logistics delays during the pandemic.
Rising input costs threaten the incomes of farmers who had banked on
booming profits this year, as crop prices soared to the highest in
nearly a decade, after years of stagnating around break-even levels.
Ragland and other farmers have been rethinking what they will plant in
the spring; crops requiring less fertilizer look more attractive.
"At the current prices for nitrogen, it's making me take a hard look at
my corn acres," Ragland said. "It makes me think we might grow soybeans
on some of those acres."
Before Hurricane Ida, the U.S. Agriculture Department had estimated that
farmers would face a 2.2% increase in all corn input expenses for every
acre planted in 2022, according to the most recent data, as chemicals
and fertilizers followed higher crop prices and supply chain
disruptions.
Global supplies were thin of the raw ingredients needed to make farm
herbicides including glufosinate, atrazine and glyphosate, partly due to
pandemic-related labor and shipping issues, said Marc-Andre Fortin,
director of North American crop protection with Farmers Business
Network, an online marketplace for farmers.
Imports of glyphosate containers shipped into the Port of New Orleans
were down 71% from the same period a year earlier and herbicide
container imports were down 1.2%, according to Panjiva, the supply chain
research unit of S&P Global Market Intelligence. Potash imports into New
Orleans dropped 14.8%.
Then, Ida hit and shuttered Bayer's glyphosate plant in Luling,
Louisiana. The plant helps provide all the active ingredient for Bayer's
Roundup branded ag herbicides in the United States, the company told
Reuters.
Bayer's plant has been closed since Aug. 28. The company, which hopes to
restore power within weeks, said it is also working to repair wind
damage and run system tests.
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A view of Mississippi
River at sunset during a blackout in the city after Hurricane Ida
made landfall in Louisiana, in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. August
31, 2021. REUTERS/Marco Bello/File Photo/File Photo
RATIONING SUPPLIES
Global glyphosate supplies were already tight as flooding, COVID-19 outbreaks
and congested ports snarled production and exports in China for months, said
Allan W. Gray, executive director of the Purdue University Center for Food and
Agricultural Business.
As a result, chemical manufacturers are rationing supplies to farmers and
others, Gray said.
Fertilizer is problematic, too. Walker and the staff at Kansas farm cooperative
MKC have not been able to get price quotes from fertilizer suppliers for early
2022. Suppliers do not know if they will have anything to sell, he said - so
Walker has turned away some customers.
Such problems have plagued retailers for months. China, the world's top exporter
of phosphate, temporarily halted urea and diammonium phosphate fertilizer
exports this summer to feed domestic demand as energy costs and corn prices
rose.
More recently, fertilizer producer CF Industries Holdings Inc halted operations
at two United Kingdom manufacturing complexes, citing high costs for natural gas
feedstock, a key raw material used in nitrogen fertilizers.
Canada's largest potash producer Nutrien Ltd is sold out in North America
through at least the third quarter, and global stocks for potash are tight for
the rest of the year, said Ken Seitz, executive vice president of potash at
Nutrien Ltd.
Ida tightened fertilizer supplies further, when CF Industries and Incitec Pivot
Ltd shut plants because of the hurricane and declared force majeure for
customers.
As the supply chain snarled, prices spiked. Prior to the storm, a New Orleans
barge of urea set to ship in September to destinations across the U.S. or Canada
traded at $450 a ton, said Josh Linville, director of fertilizer at StoneX Group
Inc. After, the price jumped to $552 a ton.
"In the fertilizer world, anything that can go wrong, will go wrong," Linville
said. "It's death by a thousand cuts."
Wheat and cotton farmer Keeff Felty, 54, said the situation is spiraling. He is
studying soil samples to see where he can cut back on fertilizer next season,
and paid a company to haul some in-state after local suppliers could not fill
his order.
"The price went up from Monday to Wednesday," said Felty, "and by that night,
they were out."
(Additional reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Manitoba; Editing by Caroline
Staufer and David Gregorio)
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