If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
All eyes are on Russia and Ukraine right now, wondering who will attack first. Whether or not this turns into a hot war (and I really, really hope it does not), the Russians have implemented a policy that will hit every American. There is now a Russian fertilizer export ban through April 1 in an attempt to tackle inflation, as well as to increase control over their own domestic crops.
This will affect every part of the American economy, from the food we eat to how we fill up our gas tanks. Understanding why involves fitting many different pieces together, but trying to understand what’s happening now will prepare us for what is likely to happen this growing season.
Where does our fertilizer come from?
The United States is a net importer when it comes to fertilizer. We are known as the “World’s Breadbasket,” because of our productive Corn Belt, but it wouldn’t be nearly so productive without our reliance on fertilizers from other countries. For example, in September 2021, the United States exported $360 million worth of fertilizers, and imported $659 million worth. This means that, for one month, we’ve got a negative trade balance of $299 million worth of fertilizer. We need that $299 million worth of fertilizer for our farms to produce the way we expect them to.
And from whom do we import much of our fertilizer? Russia. Why would the Russians restrict their exports like that?
The last thing I want to do is start blaming the Russians for everything. I’ve gotten to a point where I think a lot of the blaming the Russians is simply politicians trying to distract us from other problems. The Russians have their own set of problems; they are dealing with inflation (like us), and they think controlling their exports will help.
But it does put us in a bind
An investigation that took place during 2020 and 2021 by the Department of Commerce and the U.S. International Trade Commission found Russia and Trinidad and Tobago guilty of unfair price practices, and imposed duties on them. I am nowhere near fluent enough in trade disputes to have a strong opinion on whether or not this is a good idea. I do know that hitting vendors with additional fees often makes them take their business elsewhere. And plenty of nations besides the U.S. are happy to buy fertilizer.
The U.S. is a net importer when it comes to fertilizer, but we’re not the biggest. As of 2020, both Brazil and India imported more fertilizer than America. Yes, our corn sucks up a lot of fertilizer, but Brazil grows a lot of corn too, and India’s cotton crop requires a great deal of fertilizer, as well. Fertilizer-producing countries like Russia can pick and choose to whom they will sell, and right now, they won’t sell to anyone.
Commodities dealing has always worked like this, with countries picking and choosing with whom they will trade, and vendors shopping around for the combination of best prices and cooperative governments. For a long time, worldwide communication between various commodities dealers kept prices low.
How a Russian fertilizer export ban will impact individual Americans
I’ve been buying feed from the same dealer for years. The price was always stable, until this year. Prices for specific commodities such as oats, millet, or flax seeds have always fluctuated a little bit, but in the past, the dealers could alter their mixes a little bit based on what was most available. For example, if the price on peas went up, they could substitute with another legume whose price was down. Up until recently, the fluctuations were small and varied enough that they didn’t need to raise prices.
That all changed this year. I buy organic feed, so the issue for me was not the fertilizer prices, but the drought in the western U.S. But I have noticed that conventional prices are approaching organic prices, and the reduced fertilizer availability is a big reason why.
Worldwide, we have grown dependent on a type of agriculture that relies on chemical inputs from all over the world. People like Sir Albert Howard started warning the public about “artificial manures,” as he called them, almost 100 years ago. You can certainly spend a lot of time researching the pros and cons of organic versus conventional production, if you’re so inclined. Suffice to say, people have been talking about the perils of cheap food for a long time, and some of the things that we were warned about 100 years ago (soil degradation, requiring ever-increasing amounts of artificial fertilizer) are coming to fruition.
The consequences of ignoring resilience are coming to fruition
For me, with so many friends in the military, I have seen food security as highly relevant toward national security. It has always seemed counterintuitive to be so dependent on other countries, with whom we may or may not have friendly relationships, for our food supply. But Americans have prioritized cheap and plentiful for a long time now, relative to other concerns.
Regardless of our own personal feelings about the situation, it cannot be denied that chemical fertilizers have boosted our output of agricultural products, particularly with corn. Corn production in the United States has tripled since 1960 due to a combination of crop specialization and fertilizer use. American corn is overwhelmingly genetically engineered. The agrichemical companies claim that GMO corn uses less fertilizer than corn would use otherwise, but it still uses much more than many other crops. More than half the synthetic nitrogen made today is applied to corn. Why? Because it makes such a big difference in yield.
“I don’t eat corn, so this doesn’t matter.”
You may think to yourself that since you don’t eat that much corn on the cob this shouldn’t affect you that much. But, corn is in almost everything. Unless you are growing most of your own food, and meat, and you are buying corn-free feed, you’re eating corn. High-fructose corn syrup is in most soft drinks, juices, and baked items. When something says “vegetable oil,” that often includes corn oil. And vegetable oil is in a lot.
Corn and soy are also the two main components of animal feed, and that includes organic. If you buy meat and eggs from the store, those animals were eating corn and soy. If you think you’re getting away from corn by buying organic meat, think again. All the label “organic” here means is that the animals were fed organic corn and soy. There is no getting away from corn in the U.S. without a great deal of effort.
If you want to get a more thorough understanding of how ubiquitous corn is in the American economy, I highly recommend Michael Pollan’s book The Omnivore’s Dilemma. The book was published about 15 years ago but nothing really major has changed regarding corn. The first few chapters still give a great overview of how almost everything at the grocery store can be traced back to corn.
(Better stock up on food while your wallet gets the most bang for its buck! Read our free QUICKSTART Guide on building up your pantry supplies for a great how-to.)
A fertilizer ban will impact your gas tank, too.
And corn even goes into our fuel tanks. About one-third of the American corn crop goes into ethanol, which is usually added to gasoline at a rate of 10% (though in some parts of the Midwest you can get 15% ethanol fuel).
Scarcity drives up prices. Anyone who’s ever worked in retail knows this. A scarcity of fertilizer will affect not only food, but also gas prices. The Organic Prepper has been posting a lot of articles about inflation, and this is a big piece of that ugly puzzle.
Is there anything to do other than get depressed about the deteriorating standard of living? Yes. The farmers who this is impacting right now are still planting. Yields will not be as high, and food will be more expensive, but it’s probably not time to panic.
What it is time to do is to think about what you eat.
We can’t blend our own gasoline, and other than maybe trying to drive less (which is a pipe dream for most of us), we don’t have much control over prices at the gas pump. But we do control what kind of food we eat. The overwhelming majority of corn is highly processed. Therefore, if you eat less processed food, you will be eating less corn.
There are plenty of health reasons to eat less processed food. When I was growing up, we ate a lot of processed food because it was cheap. It’s not going to stay the “cheap” option. It’s quite likely that Depression-style stews will return as the cheapest option, because they’re made with the simplest ingredients.
Don’t get me wrong, nitrogen fertilizer goes into almost everything. Unless you’re used to shelling out for local organic everything, you will see a huge jump in prices due to this Russian fertilizer export ban. And local organic is going to increase too, for other reasons, though it won’t be quite as affected by the synthetic nitrogen shortage. But corn is the staple crop that uses the most nitrogen, and so the increased prices in corn and meat are what the general public will feel the most.
How do we as preppers cope with a Russian fertilizer export ban?
So, you can avoid corn by avoiding processed food. What about meat? I would never recommend a vegan diet, but meat is about to get a lot more expensive. If you have acreage, maybe it’s time to think about raising your own livestock. Talk to farmers in your area and start learning. If, like most people, you are in an urban/suburban environment, see if you can go in on some kind of group buy with friends to purchase an animal from a farmer near you.
I buy corn-free feed for my animals. These prices increases are going to hit me, but since I’ve been used to buying expensive feed the sticker shock won’t be as severe for me as it will be for people used to getting ultra-super-mega-cheap food. And I do sell some of the meat I raise.
For example, I am taking three pigs to the processor next week. Two I’m keeping, one I’m selling to a friend-of-a-friend who organizes groups of suburban moms to split the costs of an entire animal. Many people cannot shell out $800 at once for a bunch of pork. However, split several ways, the cost becomes much more manageable.
Become a producer
Producing as much of your own food as you can is a great first step toward self-sufficiency, as is taking back control of your household finances. Even people in apartments can often grow something. If you have a yard with some sun, you may have some pretty good options in terms of gardening. And if you’re able to have your own garden, you can produce some of your own fertilizer for it. We wash an awful lot of potential fertilizer down the drain. It’s time to start thinking really hard about what comes in, and what goes out, of our households.
Building relationships with other producers is a great second step. Our currency is being destroyed. I see no other way to put it at this point. I think bartering is going to come back with a vengeance, and anyone with real, tangible skills, whether it’s growing food, mending clothes, or keeping machinery running, will be at an advantage. The more diverse your set of acquaintances, the more options you will have when (not if, when) prices simply go nuts and you have to make some hard choices.
This Russian fertilizer export ban is something you cannot completely dodge. Are you ready?
The fertilizer shortage will pinch all of us. But the person used to consuming chips, jerky, and soda is living off big piles of corn in various stages of processing. He will feel the pain of this a lot more than the person used to throwing together beans, veggies, and meat into a soup pot. The more we pay attention to our consumption habits and our circle of acquaintances now, the better prepared we will be for the price shocks coming this year.
What are your thoughts here, though? How can America prepare for the shock of a Russian fertilizer export ban? What are you doing? Let us know in the comments below.
About Joanna
Joanna has been homeschooling three children since 2012. In 2014, she moved to the High Plains of Colorado. She and her children began a little homestead, gardening and raising chickens for eggs and meat. One animal led to another, and these days they have livestock guardian dogs, chickens, geese, ducks, alpacas, goats, pigs, and one very spoiled cat.
I really don’t eat corn. I don’t eat anything GMO, or with industrial seed oils (which includes corn oil as one of them), or processed foods.
Eat real whole foods – meat, fruit, vegetables, nuts, dairy products if you tolerate them well. No need for crappy grains or legumes that are low in nutrients.
This is called a “paleo” diet after our paleolithic ancestors. It’s what we evolved to eat and thrive on.
But what do you think your food eats? When production costs go up so will your final price.
I am not a vegan, but I am trying to stretch my meat by making soups and stews with legumes in addition to a small amount of meat (like split pea soup with ham.) I also make my own whole grain bread to go with it, using old grains like spelt.
Some folks do have issues with grains and legumes, but for many of us they are part of a healthy diet, and a good way to stretch our food budget.
The world is about to take a lesson on where stuff comes from and the connectedness of everything. And, “diet” will take a whole new meaning in years to come, too.
Do you eat beef? Cattle feed is corn. Do you drink whiskey, eat tacos or drive a car with 10% ethanol? All from corn. It ain’t just cornbread and Kellogg’s Corn Flakes.
Polite comment here, but did you read the article? Of course you eat corn! It may be several steps back from what’s on your plate, but you do consume corn in a round about way. I also am guessing, again, in a very polite way, as you mention your food preferences, you have only ever lived in the United States.
Fertilizer shortages will hit our food supply hard, all right. I’m waiting to see if my CSA guy even offers one this year! The price of these inputs has been soaring and that will affect the price of the final product, even the stuff sold at the farmer’s market. I’ve been composting everything in terms of kitchen scraps. Lots of good fertilizer in there! Especially bananas, coffee/tea grounds, egg shells, well pretty much everything.
I like to run my kitchen scraps through a half dozen chicken “compost factories.”
Eggs AND compost!
Whatever works! My city doesn’t allow more than three backyard chickens, and under very strict conditions at that. Besides, my neighbors already hate me for the veggie garden! LOL
Russia provides much of the Nitrogen in fertilizers. Nitrogen is relatively easy for ‘us’ reading this to replace for home food production – even those of you who don’t live on a cattle farm like I do. “All” you have to do is make friends with a local coffee shop, since their used grounds are high in nitrogen. Starbucks can be your friend, kinda, sorta, for once.
China and Morocco, OTOH, provide most of the phosphate. And phosphate has WAY fewer alternative sources.
Ain’t life fun.
Corn is in almost every processed product in the US, from gasoline to toothpaste. It’s not just food. The wildly out of touch subsidy situation is partly at fault too. (https://usafacts.org/articles/federal-farm-subsidies-what-data-says/)
I am allergic to corn, so I avoid even products derived from it. I can’t avoid it completely. The point is, even with my aversion to it, my prices are going to go up. Because it’s almost everywhere, and the places where it isn’t – the producers are going to try to make up the difference with other products.
Want to see where it is? Check this out: https://www.businessinsider.com/corn-product-infographic-2012-7?op=1
I really enjoyed this article. I’m definitely getting back on my compost. Thanks for the heads up!!
For the average gardener there’s things you can do to overcome including just going a buying it now. It’s still there. Just left Lowes.
For the farmers it’s not that simple because it’s bought by the ton. Prices have already tripled this year alone. Next year is looking worse.
And I don’t care what diet your on or what you don’t eat and all that noise you will be effected in cost AND availability.
Pay attention and react accordingly to your needs.
Well…poop. Looks like that “Humanure” book is getting brushed off again. And fortunately my wife always says, “I am full of it!”
I have been buying organic everything for so long I have been use to the prices for that already, but..
There are still plenty of other things that I do buy that are going to be affected by this.
And that is why I started branching out and talking to the local farmers who are all organic and don’t use any of the fertilizers and only feed on their grazing sites or the organic grains they buy. I reserved my beef and pork last year (hope its still available). There are places north and west of me in Small Town America that process meat (and have a great Oktoberfest – sausage and cheese anyone?)
I do raise chickens and bees (need to buy some more sugar for feeding them in the winter and spring) already and we make their feed ourselves in bulk. Have been using “azure standard” for the that grain and yeah they are struggling to get a lot of stuff (including drivers). WinnCo is hit or miss and there website is a “challenge.”
Back in the day you could go to Mt Pellier, ID (Now Rainy Day Foods) and by in huge bulk. That is getting pricey for “Organic Super Pails.” LDS Bishop Store Houses have bulk as well at pretty good prices (not organic). Their are places in OK for organic wheat as well. We have been using our “Food Saver” with the Mason jar attachment (harder to get jars too!) and grains with oxygen absorbers. Also 2 and 5 gallon buckets (mylar insert and oxygen absorbers). Food grade buckets and lids are getting hard to get and expensive. Its also not about just the big things though….lots and lots of little things are needed in the planning and prep. Get what you can.
If you know someone who works at a hotel that serves breakfast or a restaurant, they may be able to get the buckets that some foods come in, like pickles and strawberries in syrup. They are food grade.
My brother farms 40 acres of corn in North Florida which he sells to make ethanol. His prices for seed and fertilizer, plus shipping to the factory, have all DOUBLED this year.
A number of cattle rancher friends, who grow their own hay as feed, have said the same about their fertilizer costs.
Bottom line, more expensive gas, more expensive beef.
Seminole Wind,
I am afraid, but hope I am wrong, it will not just be gas and beef, but food over all.
Read an article the other day, 60% of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck. Those in the lower socio-economic classes will feel the pain of inflation more so than the upper classes.
However, the middle class is feeling the bite of inflation as well.
Rents are also up, hitting the non-home ownership class even harder.
Housing prices are up, as are mortgage rates, closing in on 4%. The Fed is rumored to raise interest rates 3 times, maybe 4 this year alone, and another 3 in 2023. While rate hikes are expected to crash the housing market, those who can afford to buy in a crashed market, maybe looking at 6% to double digit mortgage rates.
Can you say, “ouch!” Good! I knew you could! 😉
Another good read is Holy $hit: Managing Manure To Save Mankind by the late, great Gene Logsdon.
I also use the Humanmanure Handbook and apply it to my livestock compost piles. I have had them generating enough heat in the dead of winter, snow melts off them quickly, even after a major storm.
Also, mix in 2 year aged compost with soil/potting soil/Mel’s Mix(ref: Square Foot Gardening).
Compost tea is another good one, but use occasionally i.e. once a month.
Our president (Brazil) just traveled to Russia to try and assure we’ll get fertilizers. Not sure if we will, but news from both sides said it was a deal and the Russians assured supply won’t be interrupted.
Media and opposition slammed him for sitting down with Putin, but I’d guess 0,1% knows what’s at play with this. And they would slam him anyway, so there’s that.
Now with the war and everything, anything can happen really. Even more volatility thatsfor sure. But yes, this fertilizer thing is serious so let’s hope it gets sorted out soon.
The media hates it when leaders of countries talk. They like to stir the pot and keep things a mess.
Real leaders should be able to pickup the phone at anytime and reach out to others. Even at the height of the Cold War President Reagan did so a lot. Your leader did right by y’all by talking to Russia to fix that.
Totally agree, Matt.
He’s one of the few rightist holdouts, but he’s facing immense opposition and I don’t know what will be of us in the upcoming election. Chile has joined Argentina, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela and others recently and now has a 100% declared Marxist, WOKE president. Things are starting to unravel there already.
I didn’t vote for him in 2018, and honestly his election was kind of a fluke much in the way Trump was in US. He’s far from good, but worldwide leaders dismal and mediocre overall, can’t have too high expectations really.
At least Bolsonaro isn’t aligned with these stupid agendas, so I give him that and see his re-election as the only option to fight the return of the left/globalist here.
Canada is the world’s largest potash producer, Russia is the second.
While true David, there is no excess supply of Potash so losing the Russian Supply is like losing two cylinders from your automobile. Makes thing rather rough.
Aside from that take a look at how much of the Canadian Potash supply is already SOLD to China.
I’ve spoken to my local Farmer CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) and he’s thinking he cannot sell farm shares this year until he figures out IF he can get enough fertilizer and at WHAT PRICE.
I know my standing order from my local Agway was first delayed and now canceled due to supply issues. Happily, I have plenty from last year but next year is going to be interesting as in Chinese Curse. I will buy whatever I can to set aside for next year as building my NE soil organically is working but a multi-year process.
How many YEARS of food do you have right now?
Recipe for homemade fish emulsion fertilizer:
https://thegrownetwork.com/fish-emulsion-fertilizer/
Ive been plant based five ears come this may. Those who think you cannot survive on a vegan or plant based diet are just plain stupid. let me say it again, stupid. Research you dam fools. If you think beans dont supply enough energy youre an idiot, literally. I get up at five each day and work my ass off on a vegan lifestyle. Those who say it cant be done are just ignorant. I know I said youre stupid three times. Let it sink in. I meant it. Research and educate yourselves before spreading bad info. I wont be responding to dumb ass comments saying otherwise or attacking me. You asked for it by spreading dumb opinions. Animal proteins are triggering cancers in human beings. Plants dont!! I dont care of any comments saying otherwise I wont be reading them, haha! See you at your funeral….meat eater.
the big problem with a vegan diet is a lack of vitamin b12 – plant based sources simply don’t have it. the liver stores about six months worth, so b12 deficiency doesn’t show up for a year.
wrong plain and simple, just wrong. eat a cow for b-12. haha fool
Heap bad hunter!
I like beef, chicken, pork (raised two hogs last year), and fish.
I like my veggies too.
I guess apostrophes aren’t vegan. Who knew?
Note to Fred: You should probably proofread before posting a semi-literate diatribe about the stupidity of others if you really want to show your superior intelligence.
You are an idiot
But he has 5 ears!
thank you for this article.
urine is a great source of nitrogen. not too much, a little goes a long way.
The idea of a group buy on cattle/hogs is interesting. People pooling resources may become mainstream.
We have a local company that produces soil fertilized by worm poop.
Red wigglers to be specific. We have wood raised bed planters. We supplement with coffee ground compost tea.