Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Prices of fertilizer soar, threatenin­g Asian rice output

From India to Vietnam, cutbacks in nutrients could lead to food crisis

- PRATIK PARIJA, MAI NGOC CHAU AND DITAS LOPEZ

Soaring fertilizer costs have rice farmers across Asia scaling back their use, a move that threatens harvests of a staple that feeds half of humanity and could lead to a full- blown food crisis if prices aren’t curbed.

From India to Vietnam and the Philippine­s, prices of crop nutrients crucial to boosting food production have doubled or tripled in the past year alone. Lower fertilizer use may mean a smaller crop. The Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute predicts that yields could drop 10% in the next season, translatin­g to a loss of 36 million tons of rice, or the equivalent of feeding 500 million people.

That’s a “very conservati­ve estimate,” said Humnath Bhandari, a senior agricultur­al economist at the institute, adding that the impact could be far more severe should the war in Ukraine continue.

Fertilizer prices have been rising globally due to supply snags and production woes. More recently the war has disrupted trade with Russia, a big supplier of every major type of crop nutrient. The surge in fertilizer costs is threatenin­g to stoke food inflation if farmers continue to cut back and crop yields suffer. If that happens, global supply chains are likely to take a major hit: Practicall­y every plate of food makes it to the dinner table with the help of fertilizer­s.

Rice farmers are particular­ly vulnerable. Unlike wheat and corn, which have seen prices skyrocket as the war jeopardize­s one of the world’s major breadbaske­ts, rice prices have been subdued due to ample production and existing stockpiles. That means rice growers are having to deal with inflated costs while also not getting more money for their grains.

Nguyen Binh Phong, the owner of a fertilizer and pesticide store in Vietnam’s Kien Giang province, said the cost of a 110 pound sack of urea — a form of nitrogen fertilizer — has jumped three-fold over the past year. He said some farmers have slashed fertilizer use by 10% to 20% because of soaring prices, leading to a lower output.

“When the farmers cut fertilizer use, they accept that they will get lower profit,” he said.

Government­s in Asia, where much of the world’s rice is harvested, are keen to avoid this scenario. Keeping prices under control is important for politician­s, given rice’s importance as a staple

for hundreds of millions of people, especially lower income groups. Many nations provide fertilizer subsidies to increase yields of improved varieties of cereal crops.

The fertilizer rally is increasing their fiscal burden. India, which relies heavily on fertilizer imports, is set to spend about $20 billion to shield farmers from higher prices, up from about $ 14 billion budgeted in February. The South Asian nation is the world’s second-biggest producer of rice and exports to countries like Saudi Arabia, Iran, Nepal and Bangladesh.

Somashekha­r Rao, 57, a farmer who grows rice on a 25- acre plot in Telangana, in southern India, said he’s struggling with the increased cost of fertilizer. He expects yields to fall by 5-10% for his winter- sown crop because of the delay in securing enough supplies. Fertilizer is most effective when used on plants at their peak growing cycle.

The crunch is not all bad.

Overuse of chemical fertilizer­s is rife in the region. The surge in prices is encouragin­g farmers to use resources more efficientl­y, according to the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute, which is working with growers to achieve optimal results.

Solutions include utilizing a combinatio­n of chemical and organic inputs to maintain yields while improving soil health.

Still, these steps will take time to implement. And as the war in Ukraine continues to disrupt economies across the world, farmers and the rice institute say the hardest days are perhaps yet to come.

“If this continues, then it’s inevitable” that prices will go up, Bhandari said. “It has to be reflected somewhere.”

 ?? (Bloomberg News (WPNS)/Veejay Villafranc­a) ?? A man lifts a sack of freshly harvested rice in the Philippine­s earlier this month.
(Bloomberg News (WPNS)/Veejay Villafranc­a) A man lifts a sack of freshly harvested rice in the Philippine­s earlier this month.

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