The world is watching oil prices.

    synARKa is watching something more dangerous — the fertilizer clock.

    Gulf producers supply 40-50% of global seaborne urea and ammonia. When Hormuz closes, oil recovers in a week. Fertilizer takes 3-6 months — and farmers make irreversible sowing decisions NOW.

    Australia is caught in a three-way squeeze — fuel importer, grain exporter, and fertilizer price-taker — all at the same time.

    This morning Albanese secured Brunei fuel and fertilizer guarantees. That move confirms the window is closing faster than oil markets suggest.

    Full intelligence brief — 75 sources, 11 research steps:

    https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/hormuz-toll-booth-what-world-missing-chain-raj-singh-khche

    The Hormuz Toll Booth: What the World Is Missing About the Fertilizer-Famine Chain
    byu/synarka inenergy



    Posted by synarka

    5 Comments

    1. paulwesterberg on

      At least Australia has tons of solar exposure and a decent amout of solar generation already installed. And access to cheap Chinese EVs, some of which are rather good.

      The downside is that BEVs were only 8% of vehicles sold in 2025 so registered BEVs on the road is still probably very low. And 90% of fuel is imported so oil and refined products being blocked is likely to cause huge fuel spikes once the ~30 days of reserve fuel run out.

    2. paulwesterberg on

      > When Hormuz closes, oil recovers in a week.

      I think you mean OPENS here.

      But I also don’t think that oil/petroleum recovers in a week. I think it will take ~6-12 months for oil transport and oil reserves to recover. With oil supplies running short SE Asia refineries will have to start shutting down and getting oil to them and getting them restarted with transport of fuels to Australia will take 1-2 months but even then prices will remain high.

    3. ProfessionSome8188 on

      On top of that China is reportedly restricting sulfuric acid exports from May 2026, a move that could tighten supply chains for phosphate fertilizers because sulfuric acid is a key input in phosphoric acid and fertilizer production

    4. cromulent-facts on

      Australia produces huge quantities of technical grade ammonium nitrate for the mining industry. It’s not an ideal fertiliser because it quickly releases nitrogen, but it works.

      At present we can’t use it for farming for security reasons because it can be used in explosives. However in a fertiliser shortage that’s a policy decision and not a supply chain limitation.

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