USDA's Economic Research Service
TopicsTopics

Stay Connected

Follow ERS on Twitter
Subscribe to RSS feeds
Subscribe to ERS e-Newsletters.aspx
Listen to ERS podcasts
Read ERS blogs at USDA

Factors Contributing to the Recent Increase in U.S. Fertilizer Prices, 2002-08

by Wen-yuan Huang

Outlook No. (AR-33) 21 pp, February 2009

U.S. prices of fertilizer nutrients began to rise steadily in 2002 and increased sharply to historic highs in 2008 due to the combined effects of a number of domestic and global long- and shortrun supply and demand factors. From 2007 to 2008, spring nitrogen prices increased by a third, phosphate prices nearly doubled, and potash prices doubled. The price spike in 2008 reflects low inventories at the beginning of 2008 combined with the inability of the U.S. fertilizer industry to quickly adjust to surging demand or sharp declines in international supply. Declining fertilizer demand, disruption in fall applications, increased fertilizer imports (July to August), and tightening credit markets for fertilizer purchases contributed to the decline of fertilizer prices in late 2008. The prospect for strong fertilizer demand in early 2009, high raw material costs for the manufacture of fertilizers, production cutbacks, and decreasing supplies from fertilizer imports, however, could put upward pressure on U.S. fertilizer prices in spring 2009.

Keywords: Fertilizer, prices, costs of production, potash, phosphate, ammonia, diammonium phosphate, potassium chloride, corn, soybeans, wheat, supply-and-demand, fertilizer inventories, exports, imports, commodity prices

In this publication...

Need help with PDFs?

Order this Publication

Last updated: Saturday, May 26, 2012

For more information contact: Wen-yuan Huang