VUCA
61/100
VUCA INDEX
SITUATION · GLOBAL · RESOURCE · AGRICULTURE · TRADE · FOOD SECURITY

Fertilizer Supply Security

VUCA INDEX 61/100INDEX STEADY (±0/14D)CONFIDENCE 0.55
IN 30 SECONDS
WHAT THIS ISGlobal fertilizer markets remain structurally fragile: nitrogen tracks natural-gas swings, phosphate is dominated by Morocco's OCP with periodic Chinese export curbs, and potash depends on sanctioned Russia and Belarus. Export restrictions and price shocks flow downstream into crop yields and food prices, especially across import-dependent developing economies.
LATEST CHANGEConcentrated nitrogen, phosphate and potash supply chains face export controls and price volatility feeding food-security risk.
NEWEST EVIDENCE“World Bank fertiliser price index rose more than 12 percent in Q1 2026, reaching its highest level since October 2022.” (assessed, confidence 0.65)
WATCH NEXTFAO Food Price Index monthly cereal sub-index and IFA fertilizer affordability metric.
WHAT CHANGED · LAST 72H
China maintains intermittent phosphate and urea export controls to protect domestic supply.
Potash trade remains exposed to Russia/Belarus sanctions and logistics constraints.
Ammonia prices stay tethered to volatile European natural-gas costs.
WHY IT MATTERS

This matters because most of the world's fertilizer flows through a handful of choke points — Russian and Belarusian potash, Moroccan phosphate, gas-linked nitrogen — so one export curb or gas spike raises fertilizer costs, cuts crop yields, and pushes food prices up fastest in poor import-dependent countries.

WHY NOW

China's periodic phosphate export curbs and continued sanctions pressure on Russian and Belarusian potash keep supply structurally tight heading into the 2026 planting seasons, while natural-gas volatility feeds directly into nitrogen prices.

INTENSITY · OBSERVED + FORECAST
BASELINE 59+2 VS BASELINE
90D OBSERVEDFORECAST · DASHED
DOSSIER DEVELOPING

The narrative for this situation is being assembled from its published claims and will appear here shortly. Verified claims are already listed above.

See a complete dossier: Ebola Outbreak Tracking
NARRATIVE SENTIMENT MONITOR

How coverage of this dynamic sounds, measured daily with an open lexicon over the last week's reporting — not what is true, and not our judgment. Rows split by worldview appear when sources align to a published faction (via desk-reviewed profiles or the weekly lexicon ledger); until then, the overall tone stands alone.

All coverageTONE NEGATIVE (-26 / −100…+100)▲ warming 5 over 2d19 DOCS

DETERMINISTIC LEXICON · 7-DAY WINDOW, DAILY · OFF-TOPIC ITEMS EXCLUDED · HOVER DOC COUNTS FOR THE OUTLETS · SCORING ENGINE IGNORES THIS ENTIRELY

PUBLIC ATTENTION · SEARCH INTEREST
fertilizer prices9FADING FROM PUBLIC VIEWAS OF 2026-07-07

GOOGLE TRENDS, TRAILING 90 DAYS · NORMALIZED TO ITS OWN PEAK (100) — RELATIVE ATTENTION, NOT VOLUME · NOT A SCORING INPUT

DOWNSTREAM EFFECTS · WHAT THIS TOUCHES, AND HOW
Global Grain SecurityGlobal cereal and staple food pricesFood affordability in import-dependent deve…Global Grain SecurityRegime stability across the SahelEuropean ammonia and nitrogen-fertilizer ou…Western sanctions carve-outs for Russian fe…Critical Mineral LeverageLFP battery cathode supply chainUS farmer planting and input-cost decisionsTHIS SITUATION

VIOLET NODES = THIRD-ORDER (PROPAGATES THROUGH ANOTHER TRACKED SITUATION) · MECHANISMS & WATCH INDICATORS BELOW

MAY AFFECTGlobal cereal and staple food prices— THROUGHGlobal Grain SecurityTHIRD-ORDER

BECAUSE Fertilizer price spikes and export curbs raise input costs that cut per-hectare yields, tightening global grain supply, which then pushes cereal prices higher into 2026.

WATCH FOR FAO Food Price Index monthly cereal sub-index and IFA fertilizer affordability metric

MAY AFFECTFood affordability in import-dependent developing economies

BECAUSE Poor countries lack domestic fertilizer output and hard currency, so any price shock forces farmers to cut application rates, reducing harvests and raising local food costs fastest.

WATCH FOR Sub-Saharan Africa fertilizer application/import volumes (AFAP, World Bank) and national food-inflation prints

MAY AFFECTRegime stability across the Sahel— THROUGHGlobal Grain SecurityTHIRD-ORDER

BECAUSE Fertilizer cost spikes cut regional harvests and worsen grain security, which then deepens rural hardship that fuels food unrest and jihadist recruitment.

WATCH FOR WFP/FEWS NET Sahel food-insecurity phase classifications and ACLED food-riot event counts

MAY AFFECTEuropean ammonia and nitrogen-fertilizer output

BECAUSE Nitrogen fertilizer is made from natural gas, so gas price volatility makes European plants uneconomic and forces curtailment, tightening regional nitrogen supply.

WATCH FOR European ammonia plant utilization rates and TTF gas-price correlation with urea/ammonia benchmarks

MAY AFFECTWestern sanctions carve-outs for Russian fertilizer

BECAUSE Food-security fears pressure the US and EU to keep Russian and Belarusian potash exempt from sanctions, sustaining Moscow's export revenue despite the war.

WATCH FOR EU/US Treasury OFAC fertilizer exemption listings and Russian potash export tonnage

MAY AFFECTLFP battery cathode supply chain— THROUGHCritical Mineral LeverageTHIRD-ORDER

BECAUSE China's phosphate export curbs divert phosphoric acid toward fertilizer, which then tightens the mineral inputs competing for LFP battery production.

WATCH FOR China phosphate export quota announcements and purified phosphoric acid spot prices

MAY AFFECTUS farmer planting and input-cost decisions

BECAUSE Rising fertilizer costs squeeze crop margins, prompting farmers to shift acreage or cut applications ahead of the 2026 season.

WATCH FOR USDA prospective plantings report and Green Markets North America fertilizer price index

THEATER · GLOBAL · INFRASTRUCTURE
LOADING MAP…

The glow marks this situation's center — its size follows the current intensity (61/100). Every dot is a real place — hover it for what it is; red dots are damaged or offline. Drag to pan; the buttons on the map add layers.

MINEREFINERYPORT
WATCH NEXT
INDICATOR FAO Food Price Index monthly cereal sub-index and IFA fertilizer affordability metric(moves Global cereal and staple food prices)
INDICATOR Sub-Saharan Africa fertilizer application/import volumes (AFAP, World Bank) and national food-inflation prints(moves Food affordability in import-dependent developing economies)
INDICATOR WFP/FEWS NET Sahel food-insecurity phase classifications and ACLED food-riot event counts(moves Regime stability across the Sahel)
INDICATOR European ammonia plant utilization rates and TTF gas-price correlation with urea/ammonia benchmarks(moves European ammonia and nitrogen-fertilizer output)

QUESTIONS ARE SCORED — BRIER + LOG, PUBLIC TRACK RECORD ON /ACCURACY

TIMELINE

Event history for this dynamic is still being curated. The current assessment is built from the claims, sources, and score movement on this page.

NOW
Concentrated nitrogen, phosphate and potash supply chains face export controls and price volatility feeding food-security risk.
WATCH
FAO Food Price Index monthly cereal sub-index and IFA fertilizer affordability metric
WHY THIS SCORE · THE ENGINE'S OWN INPUTS
61+2 / 24H+2 / 7D+2 / 30D
CONFIDENCE 55%UPDATED 2026-07-08 08:01Z

Attention, not events: reporting volume is running above its recent norm (index up 2 this week) — no measured world-state signal moved.

VOLATILITY63
how fast events are arriving vs the norm
UNCERTAINTY53
how much the evidence disagrees or hedges
COMPLEXITY55
how many actors and linkages are in play
AMBIGUITY60
how contested the interpretation is
MOMENTUM ±0 / 14DHORIZON 90D0 CLAIMS · 0 EVIDENCE ITEMS
WHAT'S DRIVING IT
COVERAGE the information environment — attention, not events
  • +reporting flow above its 28-day norm
EVIDENCE QUALITY how solid the read is
  • +55 sources fresh within 48h

Reading this block: score change = the VUCA composite vs prior periods (24H/7D/30D). Momentum (on cards) = directional pressure over 14 days — a dynamic can be up on 14 days and flat this week. Coverage measures reporting volume, not world events. Confidence is our confidence in the assessment, not in any outcome.

SIGNAL MIX: 10% LIVE MEASUREMENT · 90% CALIBRATED BASELINE (SET FROM VERIFIED HISTORICAL RECORDS WHEN COVERAGE OPENED). EVERY DOSSIER STARTS BASELINE-HEAVY AND SHIFTS TO LIVE MEASUREMENT AUTOMATICALLY — FULL WEIGHT AFTER ~30 MEASURED DAYS. METHOD: /METHODOLOGY.

ACTORS · 6
STRUCTURED DATA · PRIMARY SOURCES

PRIMARY DATASETS · TRACKED REFERENCE · AUTOMATED SIGNAL EXTRACTION IN A LATER PHASE

RAW SIGNAL · LIVE
INGESTION V0 · RELEVANCE-FILTERED

RAW FEED — NOT YET EXTRACTED INTO CLAIMS · OFF-TOPIC ITEMS ARE FILTERED BUT KEPT FOR AUDIT · LINKS LEAVE VUCA NEWS

COMMON QUESTIONS
What is happening with Fertilizer Supply Security?

Concentrated nitrogen, phosphate and potash supply chains face export controls and price volatility feeding food-security risk. Global fertilizer markets remain structurally fragile: nitrogen tracks natural-gas swings, phosphate is dominated by Morocco's OCP with periodic Chinese export curbs, and potash depends on sanctioned Russia and Belarus. Export restrictions and price shocks flow downstream into crop yields and food prices, especially across import-dependent developing economies.

Why does fertilizer supply security matter?

This matters because most of the world's fertilizer flows through a handful of choke points — Russian and Belarusian potash, Moroccan phosphate, gas-linked nitrogen — so one export curb or gas spike raises fertilizer costs, cuts crop yields, and pushes food prices up fastest in poor import-dependent countries.

How serious is the situation right now?

The VUCA index reads 61/100 (0 = calm, 100 = critical) and is steady over the last 14 days. The score is computed daily from measured inputs and explains itself on this page.

How does VUCA News know this?

Fertilizer Supply Security carries 3 published claims, each linked to its evidence chain and verification state. Nothing publishes without passing the verification pipeline; the method is public at vucanews.com/methodology.

RELATED DYNAMICS