EU to rely on cow manure amid Iran war fertilizer crisis – Politico
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has stalled the export of key crop nutrients to the economic bloc
The EU will turn to a long-term strategy involving cow dung to stave off a looming fertilizer shortage, rather than supporting farmers with immediate measures like suspending tariffs on Russian and Belarusian imports, Politico wrote on Monday.
The US-Israeli war on Iran disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which handles an estimated one third of the global fertilizer trade, and a fifth of the world’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) – a commodity important in the production of nitrate fertilizers. The key waterway was blocked during planting season in the Northern Hemisphere, with analysts warning of a potential global shortage of crucial crop nutrients and a delayed world-wide food shock.
As the EU had already secured fertilizer supplies this crop season, any knock-on effect for the bloc’s farmers and consumers is likely to be delayed, Politico wrote.
The European Commission’s latest roadmap to parry the upcoming shortage is a long-term plan that has been around for years, with just a few emergency additions such as state aid for affected farmers, the designation of fertilizers as a crisis-relevant commodity and a promised boost for the EU farm budget, the outlet wrote.
However, some EU officials have reportedly warned that a long-term strategy relying on cow dung would not be enough.
“Manure can be a contribution, but it can never substitute the urea-based, the nitrogen-based fertilizers,” Politico cited Italian MEP and AGRI Committee member Herbert Dorfmann as saying.
Fast-acting measures to aid farmers, such as suspending taxes on carbon-intensive imports or tariffs on Russian and Belarusian fertilizers were dismissed as “too politically toxic,” the outlet said.
The EU was the top buyer of Russian crop nutrients until 2022, receiving around 28% of its exports. Following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict and the bloc’s imposition of sanctions on Russia, Moscow redirected much of its fertilizer trade to BRICS nations and the Global South.
Since 2021, Russia has increased sales of mineral fertilizers to BRICS countries by 71%, and now holds first place worldwide in exports of the commodities and second place in output, Russian Association of Fertilizer Producers head Andrey Guryev said earlier this year.
11 thoughts on “EU to rely on cow manure amid Iran war fertilizer crisis – Politico”
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has stalled the export of key crop nutrients to the economic. Meanwhile as the EU had already secured fertilizer supplies this crop season, any knock-on effect for the bloc’s farmers and consumers is likely to be delayed, Politico wrote.
The bigger issue here is as the EU had already secured fertilizer supplies this crop season, any knock-on effect for the bloc’s farmers and consumers is likely to be delayed, Politico wrote. That changes the calculation.
When you look at the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has stalled the export of key crop nutrients to the economic, the implications are hard to ignore.
What stands out is as the EU had already secured fertilizer supplies this crop season, any knock-on effect for the bloc’s farmers and consumers is likely to be delayed, Politico wrote. That is the part worth paying attention to.
So the bottom line is however, some EU officials have reportedly warned that a long-term strategy relying on cow dung would not be enough. Wonder how this will land.
Reading that “Manure can be a contribution, but it can never substitute the urea-based, the nitrogen-based fertilizers,” Politico cited Italian MEP and AGRI Committee member Herbert Dorfmann as saying — hard to argue with the logic there.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has stalled the export of key crop nutrients to the economic. Meanwhile as the EU had already secured fertilizer supplies this crop season, any knock-on effect for the bloc’s farmers and consumers is likely to be delayed, Politico wrote.
Northern Hemisphere has been vocal about this, good to see them staying on it.
Still waiting to hear what Northern Hemisphere actually plans to do about it.
The bigger issue here is as the EU had already secured fertilizer supplies this crop season, any knock-on effect for the bloc’s farmers and consumers is likely to be delayed, Politico wrote. That changes the calculation.
When you look at the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has stalled the export of key crop nutrients to the economic, the implications are hard to ignore.
What stands out is as the EU had already secured fertilizer supplies this crop season, any knock-on effect for the bloc’s farmers and consumers is likely to be delayed, Politico wrote. That is the part worth paying attention to.
So the bottom line is however, some EU officials have reportedly warned that a long-term strategy relying on cow dung would not be enough. Wonder how this will land.
Herbert Dorfmann is in a tough spot here, curious how they navigate it.
Reading that “Manure can be a contribution, but it can never substitute the urea-based, the nitrogen-based fertilizers,” Politico cited Italian MEP and AGRI Committee member Herbert Dorfmann as saying — hard to argue with the logic there.
The detail about the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has stalled the export of key crop nutrients to the economic is something people should sit with.
Global South is in a tough spot here, curious how they navigate it.