The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - As Fertilizer Falls, Famine Will Follow || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: March 26, 2026Now that the Strait of Hormuz is shut down due to the Iran war, the impact is beginning to hit global food systems. This is coming in the form of fertilizer production disruptions in the Persian Gulf....Join the Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/PeterZeihanFull Newsletter: https://bit.ly/3NEtJk2
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Hey everybody, Peter Zine here coming from Colorado where we are getting a significant, unexpected
storm.
Anyway, obviously we're going to talk about the Persian Gulf today.
Ever since the straits closed, it's been a question of how soon before things get really
nasty and now we're there.
We've got missile and drone attacks that are regularly punching through the defensive
envelope on the western side of the Persian Gulf with Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates,
clearly if not out, almost very nearly out of interceptors and things are getting through
to those two countries regularly attacking strategic things like airports and energy infrastructure.
Today, we're going to talk about the impact that this is going to have on global food supplies,
which is pretty fucking damning.
So there's three types of fertilizer.
There's something called potash, which is a potassium-based fertilizer that is primarily mined.
Most of that comes from either the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, so you know, don't mess up
NAFTA talks.
Belarus and the former Soviet Union and a little bit more.
more from Russia.
Those three places are the vast majority of what is produced on the planet.
That is, thank God, not affected.
Number two is phosphate, which is basically fossilized bird poop.
The big producers there are a little bit from Saudi Arabia, a bit of a problem.
There's a lot in Morocco.
That seems fine at the moment.
Peru has some.
Florida has some.
For the moment, the Saudi part was just single-digit percentage of global supply.
It's probably going to be impacted.
but not critically because they can always truck it out or to the west.
It's not ideal, but it can be done.
The third one is where the real problem is.
Nitrogen-based fertilizers, which are, as a rule,
a derivative of an oil-based naphtha product or natural gas.
And here, the big player is gutter,
that little thumb in the middle of the west side of the Persian Gulf,
Qatar, for those of you who like to pronounce it the anglicized way.
What they call the South Pars, natural gas field,
is one of the largest in the world,
and they produce condensate there, which is kind of a hybrid oil natural gas product.
But as a byproduct, they get all the natural gas they could ever use.
So it's actually the lifting cost for that stuff is negative, and it's just offshore.
So getting it to something to process is very, very easy.
They use this to do liquefied natural gas, of which they provide 10% of the global total.
That's obviously gone.
The facility that produces it has already been hit.
So even if the war were to end tomorrow, I doubt it would be back online within six months.
But today we're going to talk about what they do with fertilizer, because they use.
that natural gas in order to make ammonia, and then they convert the ammonia to something
called urea.
And urea is a natural gas-based fertilizer made out of primarily nitrogen that you can spread
in physical form, whether pellets or ground powder or whatever.
And this one facility in gutter is responsible for about 11% of global urea production,
and that is the primary method that people apply nitrogen.
There are other ways.
Those other ways are all ammonia-based, and collectively the Persian Gulf,
is responsible for between 30 and 35% of global ammonia production,
and all of that has now gone to zero.
Now, of the three nutrients, this is the one I am least concerned with in the short term
because it can be derived from either natural gas itself or oil,
which can then be refined into something called naphtha,
and that naphtha can go on to make nitrogen-based fertilizers.
The problem, of course, is that 20% of global oil is offline
because of the Persian Gulf.
So while here in the United States where we are a net oil exporter and just have scads of natural gas and produce pretty much all the nitrogen we need ourselves and can produce more if the market pushes us in that direction, which it absolutely will from now until the end of my life at this point.
Most of the rest of the world cannot do that.
So in the short term, because of the United States, we're probably not going to have massive shortages of nitrogen-based fertilizers.
Prices will go up, but we won't have actual shortages.
But if you fast forward, one, two, three, ten, twenty, thirty, fifty years, the rest of the world is going to be in chronic nitrogen deficit pretty much from now on.
That's before you consider shortages of the other materials that are likely to manifest in the years to come.
So prepare for an environment where food production on a global basis stalls and then crashes with some areas affected far more than others.
The one that should be at the top of your list for not being able to maintain output is going to be China
because they import pretty much all of the inputs that they need to either make their own fertilizer
or they just import the fertilizer directly.
South Asia, India also looks like it's going to be significantly under pressure unless they can find a way to manage access direct to the Persian Gulf themselves,
which is a feasible option for them, but it requires them thinking significantly different about their security policy.
But now they absolutely have the impetus to do so.
