One of the most pernicious consequences - if primarily for the anti-Russia West - resulting from the Ukraine war, has been the unprecedented spike in fertilizer prices that, among other things, has sparked a historic surge in food prices and collapse in supply chains around the globe, as we discussed in these articles published over the past few months:
- Fertilizer Prices Hit Record Highs, May Pressure Food Inflation Even Higher
- "Fertilizer Is Out Of Control" - US Farmers Ditch Corn For Soy To Save On Costs
- Poop-Boom: Manure Supplies Tighten As Fertilizer Prices Soar
- World's Largest Fertilizer Company Warns Crop Nutrient Disruptions Through 2023
Fast forwarding to today, when we have some good, some bad and some pretty terrible news. The good news it that fertilizer prices have eased modestly from all-time highs.
The bad news is that the the price hasn't dropped nearly enough: according to Bloomberg, the glut of fertilizers piling up at the biggest Brazilian ports signals that the price of the nutrients has to drop further before farmers start buying.
In Paranagua, private warehouses reached their maximum storage capacity of 3.5 million tons, Luiz Teixeira da Silva, Paranagua's operations director told Bloomberg. A terminal operated by VLI Logistics, one of the two at Santos port that store fertilizers, is also full, according to people with knowledge of the matter who asked not to be named as the information isn't public.
As noted above, the price of fertilizers across the globe has exploded to unprecedented levels, and Brazil has been no exception. READ MORE