U.S. nitrogen exports jump as Europe scrambles for fertilizer
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[October 25, 2022] By
Rod Nickel, Mark Weinraub and Maytaal Angel
CHICAGO/LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. exports of
nitrogen fertilizers jumped to a multi-year high this summer after
surging natural gas prices in Europe drove up costs of producing the
crop nutrient there, making U.S. shipments more competitive.
The brisk U.S. sales highlight the far-reaching effect of the war in
Ukraine on global food and energy supplies. Russia, under financial
sanctions, is a major producer of fertilizer and natural gas, key in
making nitrogen products to boost yields of corn and other crops.
Since Russia's February invasion of Ukraine, Europe started weaning
itself off Russian natural gas and a pipeline transporting ammonia from
Russia to a Ukraine port shut down.
Tight fertilizer supplies have driven up crop nutrient prices so much
worldwide that the United Nations warned this month of a "future crisis"
of availability. European companies have been forced to close some
fertilizer plants due to high costs.
Exports from the United States, the world's third-largest producer,
soared to 370,000 short tons of nutrient in August, more than double the
year-earlier total, according to the most recent U.S. Census Bureau
data, compiled by industry group The Fertilizer Institute (TFI) for
Reuters. That figure is the highest monthly total since TFI began
tracking the data in 2013.
European buyers are outbidding domestic buyers in both the United States
and other exporters like Indonesia and Malaysia, said Alistair Wallace,
principal at Argus Media in London.
Despite the surge in exports, separate TFI data shows that as of June,
U.S. nitrogen fertilizer supply was at its second-highest level in the
last decade, indicating a global dislocation, rather than shortage.
It is not yet clear whether the U.S. produced more than usual in July
and August, or diverted a larger share of supplies to Europe, said Jason
Troendle, economist at TFI, whose members include CF Industries and
Nutrien.
The United States is historically a small exporter, and its ability to
backfill markets is limited, Troendle said.
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A farmer spreads nitrogen fertilizer in
his wheat field in Blecourt, France, May 27, 2021. REUTERS/Pascal
Rossignol/File Photo
The countries with the biggest year-over-year increases in U.S.
purchases are in Europe - France, Belgium, Norway and Lithuania - as
well as Morocco, Chile and Brazil, Troendle said.
European countries typically buy most of their imported urea, a form
of nitrogen fertilizer, from North Africa, but are now purchasing it
further afield, Wallace said.
EU nitrogen prices eased in mid-October as some European plants
resumed production due to softening natural gas prices, he said.
European farmers are not able to stock up on fertilizer as much as
they should ahead of planting next spring due to high prices and
tight supply, said Pekka Pesonen, secretary-general of European
farming group Copa-Cogeca.
"We're talking about the need for huge volumes over a short period
of time," Pesonen said.
Despite high input costs, U.S. growers may sow even more
fertilizer-intensive corn next year. A Farm Futures growers survey
forecasts corn acreage at a 10-year high of 94.282 million acres, up
6.4% from 2022.
Farmer Dave Nelson of Belmond, Iowa, has seen his fertilizer costs
soar to $1,280 per ton this year from $350 a ton two years ago. He
locked in that price this fall so he could start calculating a 2023
budget.
“I might as well do it because (price) is only going to go higher,”
said Nelson, who grows corn and soybeans. “If you start skimping on
fertilizer... you just end up hurting yourself in the end.”
Brazil, which relies on imports for 85% of its fertilizer, bought
more ammonium nitrate from the United States, Belgium and Holland in
the January-September period to make up for reduced Russian
supplies, investment bank Itau BBA said.
(Reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Maytaal Angel in
London, Ludwig Burger in Frankfurt, Mark Weinraub in Chicago and
Marcelo Teixeira in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)
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