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 Fuel, fertiliser, chemicals prices surge driving up ... 

Fuel, fertiliser, chemicals prices surge driving up food inflation

20/05/2008 3:38:00 PM
Australian farmers are asking themselves how they will grow a crop this year with an almost vertical rise in nitrogen fertiliser prices adding further to the doubling of phosphate fertiliser costs and tripling of some farm chemicals in recent months.

“Food prices are often blamed for high inflation across Australia," AgForce Grains president Lyndon Pfeffer says.

"But farmers know it is the increased cost of three inputs – fuel, fertiliser and chemicals – that is driving inflation.”

Mr Pfeffer says these costs will have major flow-on impact on the price of grain for human and animal consumption.

“AgForce identified a significant effect on returns a month ago when the price of phosphate fertiliser and glyphosate rose dramatically again," he says.

"Now the price of urea and other nitrogen fertilisers is increasing even more rapidly.

"And this has coincided with a 3pc or $100/tonne drop in the price of wheat at the farm gate over the same period.

“Fertiliser now represents about 50pc of the cost of production for grain in Queensland, whereas in the past, fertiliser represented about 25-30pc of the input cost, with the rest taken up by fuel, labour, weed control agents, seed and machinery.

“With China having increased the tariff it imposes on fertiliser from 20pc in February up to 136pc, the impact on the world market price for nitrogen fertiliser is now astronomical.”

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Comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
If a country increases the tariff (on fertiliser), it leads to a FALL in world prices, not an increase as in stated in last paragraph.

A tariff increase reduces the market available for the world producers and so more fertiliser is available on the world market.

I suggest the "astronomical" is misplaced and simply wrong.

Posted by Remco on 21/05/2008 4:26:07 PM
Sorry Remco, but you're just plain wrong.

China has increased its EXPORT tariff on fertilisers, meaning that the price has effectively doubled.

Remember China is a major producer of fertilisers, and they are trying to take their product off the world market.

They have done this because they hold a very real fear that that will not have enough fertiliser to meet their own needs let alone export to other countries.

The knock on effect of this is that all remaining available product in the world market place (which is also scarce) is benchmarked against the Chinese price, meaning only one thing; price goes up.

Posted by jboy on 22/05/2008 10:07:58 AM

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11/12/2008 | Farm lobby groups will decide next week whether the future of farm representation will stay as it is or be broadened to bring in the big end of town.
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