Watch: The Other Reason Why Food Prices Are Rising (youtube.com)
The United Nations’ worst-case scenario calculation is that food prices will rise by an additional 8.5% by 2027. Part of those higher costs is due to more expensive fertilizers as some have seen 300% price spikes over the past year, according to the American Farm Bureau. Farmers may be forced to pass those costs along to customers, resulting in higher grocery prices. Fertilizer is essential for crops. Without fertilizer, plants may not get the nourishment they need to result in the yields necessary to feed the global population. According to the International Fertilizer Association, we would only be able to feed about half of the global population without fertilizer.

Watch the video above to learn more about why the world is faced with a fertilizer crisis, supply chain woes, climate change impact and potential solutions on the horizon.

"Last year [fertilizer] was around $270 per ton and now it's over $1,400 per ton," Meagan Kaiser, of Kaiser Family Farms and farmer-director of the United Soybean Board, told NBC's "Nightly News with Lester Holt."

"It's scary. It turns my stomach a little bit to think about the amount of risk that our family farm is taking right now."

Farmers are trying to adjust to this new normal. When surveyed in spring 2022 about what they intended to plant, farmers said they were turning to more soybean, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data, or a record 91 million acres of the legume. That may be because legumes don't require as much fertilizer as corn to grow.

Spikes in fertilizer prices started when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

"It's amazing how dependent the world is on fertilizers from the region that we're talking about Russia and Ukraine," Johanna Mendelson Forman, adjunct professor at American University's School of International Service, told CNBC.

The region is responsible for at least 28% of the world's fertilizer exports, including nitrogen-, potassium- and phosphorus-based fertilizers, according to Morgan Stanley.

Also factoring into price spikes are rising natural gas costs.

"There's a direct relationship with what we're seeing in fuel prices and fertilizer prices," Jo Handelsman, director of the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told CNBC.

That's because fossil fuels are used in the manufacturing process of fertilizers — and is one of the reasons that they can contribute to climate change.

Plus, if farmers overuse fertilizers, the chemicals can run off into waterways, causing environmental damage, pollution and illnesses.

"I'm not saying that the fertilizer is bad ... our soil naturally has nutrients," Ronald Vargas, secretary of the Global Soil Partnership for the United Nations. "If [soil] is naturally depleted, then you need to find a way to make those nutrients available."

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The Other Reason Why Food Prices Are Rising
ChaptersVIEW ALLhqdefault_45266.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEcCNACELwB8.5% by 20270:21hqdefault_114900.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEcCNACELwThe fertilizer crisis1:32hqdefault_189833.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEcCNACELw91 million acres of soybeans3:03hqdefault_224266.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEcCNACELwThe food price index increased 10.9% year over year3:21hqdefault_321900.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEcCNACELwUkraine war sparks rush for potash as global food fears grow5:12hqdefault_339766.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEcCNACELw28% of fertilizers made from nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are from Russia and Ukraine5:34Show less
Comments
    • 1
    Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst One has to be seriously out of the grid to not see how expensive is the grocery list nowadays. And the trend is that prices will go up much more before they can be controlled or even being taken down in the next future. Causes: inflation, of course, but inflation has its own causes. The fertiliser crisis which has risen with the excuse of the Ukraine conflict, and logistic and supply chain reasons. Fertilizer's price is so bad that farmers, both industrial and small holders find very difficult to cultivate enough food crops. There is also a political/ecologist side trying to push for an organic agriculture which, in principle laudable and healthy, doesn't really answer to the needs of almost 8 billion people by now. Mix it with climate change issues, political shifts where commodities are also weapons, the end of the chain is the consumer which has to pay more for food products. And even this explanation is shallow. There are so many sides, so many decisions which are conducive to a perfect storm which can be explosive and catastrophic in some parts of the world (see Sri Lanka's situation) if not everywhere.