Hormuz Blockade Threatens Global Food Prices and Fertiliser Costs

TL;DR Summary
Blocking the Strait of Hormuz could disrupt not only oil transit but also fertiliser exports from the Gulf, raising prices for urea, DAP and ammonia and feeding into higher food costs globally. With fertiliser a major production input tied to natural gas, energy shocks could amplify farming and processing costs, potentially fueling longer-term food price inflation even if near-term effects are modest; the risk rises if hostilities persist.
- Why blocking Hormuz could threaten the world's food supply Euronews.com
- The War’s Effect on the Supermarket The New York Times
- Gulf food strategy tested as Iran war snarls shipping routes Reuters
- Iran crisis stokes fears among UK farmers over higher fertiliser costs Financial Times
- Iran War Promises Even More Pain for Farmers Foreign Policy
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