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Energy: Fertilizers factories shutting down
  • The European fertilizer industry believes that the European Commission's proposed set of instruments on energy prices can only provide short-term assistance to industries whose competitiveness has suffered from an unbalanced energy market. Prompt and targeted action is critical as negative impacts on agri-food and other value chains must be avoided, while the fertilizer industry must remain able to invest in low-carbon technologies.

    The operations of the European fertilizer industry are heavily influenced by sky-high gas prices. “In the fertilizer industry in the EU, natural gas traditionally accounts for up to 80% and production costs are rising. Exceptionally high gas prices made fertilizer production in Europe unprofitable, leading to significant temporary cuts and plant closures across Europe. If this situation is not urgently addressed, there is a real risk that the temporary closure will result in the permanent closure or relocation of our sector outside of Europe, ”said Jacob Hansen, CEO of Fertilizers Europe

    Hansen explained that “rising energy prices lead to reduced fertilizer production, increased production costs for farmers and, in turn, a jump in food prices. But fertilizer production isn't just food for plants. Our industry is also a key supplier of AdBlue for heavy vehicles, CO₂ for the meat and beverage industry.”

  • 5 Replies sorted by
  • Massive insects and fungus will attack the food crops, making it harder to survive for average joe Many will die next six months.

    • The largest ammonia producer in Germany - SKW Piesteritz - cuts production amid the energy crisis! Today announced a reduction of 20%
    • Austrian fertilizer manufacturer Borealis AG has stopped ammonia production.
    • American holding CF Industries Holdings announced the closure of two of its plants for the production of ammonium nitrate in the UK.
    • Norwegian company Yara announced a 40% cut in production due to high gas prices and planned repairs.
    • Spain's Fertiberia has already decommissioned an ammonia plant at its Wales plant.
    • China is cutting back on fertilizer exports.
    • The freeze of production was reported by two factories in Ukraine.
    • Chemical giant BASF has cut ammonia capacity due to an "extremely difficult" situation at its plants in Antwerp and Ludwigshafen in Belgium and Germany.
    • In Lithuania, after the completion of scheduled repairs, Achema decided to temporarily not launch one of its ammonia plants
  • Looks like the novel virus genocide trend is not getting hot enought so they going back to the old fashioned starvation style.

    Risky move, things here are bordering collapse. We're not into war yet because theres only one player in the field for now. Number of guns sold to conservative right is now closing to the number of active military personal (police+army) and they will not necessarly opose each other wtshtf.

  • @RoadsidePicnic

    That you see now is Chinese peak coal becoming really obvious.

    Previous peak coal moments happened in 1914 - for UK, and 1943 - for Germany (this one tried to plan ahead).

  • On Oct. 15, Beijing implemented a new rule requiring additional inspection of fertilizer exports. The General Administration of Customs added new inspection requirements on urea to ammonium nitrate.

    China's move to impose export restrictions on fertilizers will be felt worldwide. Beijing's increased scrutiny comes as global fertilizer markets have been battered by plant shutdowns and skyrocketing prices.