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Phosphate and fertilizer shortages to disrupt global food supply

Mar 21, 2023

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Phosphate is a key component in the global fertilizer supply chain, aiding in the production of crops and food. China is the world’s biggest exporter of phosphate, but after a deadly outbreak of African swine fever four years ago, China began to hoard the essential element.

Straight Arrow News contributor Peter Zeihan warns that with a new surge in African swine fever infections recently reported in China, and fears of food insecurity growing, China’s phosphate stockpiles will be impacted with the potential to disrupt the world’s food supply for years.

Excerpted from Peter’s Mar. 20 “Zeihan on Geopolitics” newsletter:

If you’ve read my latest book, The End of the World Is Just the Beginning, you know what question keeps me up at night: How long will we be able to feed the world’s population? With threats to food security increasing daily, China is a scary example of how quickly this situation could go from critical to catastrophic.

Four years ago, China faced the worst case of African Swine Fever [sic] (ASF) ever recorded. It spread through their pig population like wildfire, resulting in the killing of massive amounts of livestock. Since then, the CCP has limited reporting of outbreaks and testing for ASF. Some brave CCP reps are now reporting the actual numbers and I wouldn’t be surprised if this outbreak becomes worse than the last. So what does that mean for China’s food security?

The only other relevant foodstuff that China produces is rice. Unfortunately for them, the phosphate fertilizer that rice needs to grow is already facing massive shortages. China was once the largest exporter of phosphate, but they’ve started hoarding the stuff as the potential for food shortages increases.

Thanks to stockpiles of fertilizers (and some help from Mother Nature), the world was able to wiggle by last year. With increasing disruptions to the nutrients used in fertilizers and food security overall, the world is going to face severe problems in the years to come.

Hey everyone, Peter Zion here coming to you from foggy snowy Colorado, it is the 16th of March on Thursday, and it’s time to start talking about food shortages. We’re going to start with this part on China. So the Chinese, as you may have heard me discuss in the past have a cult of personality, which means things like, tests for animal diseases that the government finds inconvenient, tend to not just happen, because the CCP reps get in the way. So there’s something called African swine fever, which is something that the pork community is terrified of, because it’s basically a bola for pigs, highly communicable always ends in the death of the pig. And if one hog in your herd gets, you basically have to call the entire thing. Now, about four years ago, China suffered through the biggest ASF epidemic in history, and over the course of about six to eight months killed more of its own hogs commercially than the rest of the world has commercial hogs. And that triggered a lot of paranoia within the CCP about fursuit food security, for obvious reasons. This is maybe happening and again, now, the way it works in a normal place, if you’re a pig rancher farmer, and you want to find out if your hog has a disease, you get a test kit, you take certain swabs and samples, and then you send that test kit with the swabs and samples into a lab. And when the lab gets the results they call you. That’s not how it works in China and China, there’s an intermediate step, where the lab calls the local CCP rep. And then the CCP rep calls you to let you know if you got a case or not. And since it’s a cult of personality, and no one has been given an approval to trigger a food crisis, they just kind of let it go on in the background. Well, in the last few weeks, there have been some very brave CCP reps who have decided to report the truth. And as of the news of this week, we now have more cases of ASF being reported in China and just the month to date than the entirety of the previous year. You see, ASF is not something you just get rid of, it’s not once and done, it gets into the wild boar and wild pig population. And then it takes decades to get rid of. According to the Chinese, they got rid of it in six months, and they haven’t had a case until recently. But all of a sudden, now it’s boiling up again. There are different strains, some are more lethal and more dangerous and more communicable than others. And officially, it’s some of those less dangerous ones that are out there. But the fact that you’ve got brave officials choosing to go against the poverty line and report them at all suggest that we have a much much much, much larger problem in store. And we should expect some significant issues throughout the food supply chains or for pork throughout the Chinese system. Will it be as bad as it was four years ago, kind of believe it will if not worse, because they’ve been allowing this to burn in the background in order to achieve political placidity. Now, how does that matter to you? Well, if the Chinese can’t guarantee pork supply, then the only other culturally significant food that they can produce in mass is rice. Now rice is the most phosphate fertilizer hungry crops that humans are capable of growing. And because of that China has historically been the world’s largest producer and exporter of phosphate. until four years ago, starting with that epidemic, the Chinese started hoarding phosphate because they were concerned about food security, and they knew they needed rice because it’s the only other socially and politically important crop that the Chinese have. Well, since then, the last four years phosphate exports have been down 20 to 80%, based on the season, very erratic based on where the Chinese level of fear is, now that we actually have official cases of African swine fever, again, we should expect phosphate exports to more or less go to zero, meaning that the single largest source of one of the three main fertilizer nutrients is suddenly in dire condition. And that is going to have implications throughout the entire agricultural system of the world. We were very fortunate in calendar year 2022. And that despite disruptions from China, from Russia and from the energy space, we had enough reserves built up in the system for all the types of fertilizers in order to kind of wiggle by and we also had excellent weather for most of the world’s farmers. The chances of that happening twice in a row, especially when you have disruptions like ASF in China right now are almost non existent. Which means that the next one tomorrow, we’re going to talk about the weather and where in the world we are seeing already disruptions to the food supply system. All right, that’s it. See you guys tomorrow.

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