EU suspends duties on fertilizers to ease impact of Hormuz crisis on farmers

EU suspends duties on fertilizers to ease impact of Hormuz crisis on farmers
The EU ‌will temporarily lift customs duties on key nitrogen-based fertilizers such as urea and ammonia for one year to mitigate the knock-on effects of the Iran war, the Council of the EU said on Friday. (Shutterstock/File)
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Updated 22 May 2026 17:41
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EU suspends duties on fertilizers to ease impact of Hormuz crisis on farmers

EU suspends duties on fertilizers to ease impact of Hormuz crisis on farmers
  • Global fertilizer prices have jumped following the near total closure of the Strait of Hormuz
  • The suspension will not apply to fertilizer products imported from Russia or Belarus, the Council said

BRUSSELS: The EU ‌will temporarily lift customs duties on key nitrogen-based fertilizers such as urea and ammonia for one year to mitigate the knock-on effects of the Iran war, the Council of the EU said on Friday.
Global fertilizer prices have jumped following the near total closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow shipping route along Iran’s coast through which around one-third of global fertilizer trade passes.
While the EU does not depend on the nitrogen-based fertilizers, namely urea, produced in the Middle East, prices for ‌all types of ‌fertilizers have risen as countries race ‌to source ⁠alternatives.
The UN Food ⁠and Agriculture Organization warned last month that a prolonged blockade could trigger an agrifood catastrophe.
The suspension will not apply to fertilizer products imported from Russia or Belarus, the Council statement said.
The EU imports a significant volume duty-free from countries with preferential access, but a “large volume” still arrives with tariff rates of ⁠between 5.5 percent to 6.5 percent, the statement said.
“To ‌balance the interests of EU ‌producers, the measure is limited to a quota of goods equal ‌to the volume of MFN (most favored nation) imports in 2024 ‌plus 20 percent of the volumes imported from Russia and Belarus in the same year,” it said. The measures will come into force in a few days once they are published in the EU’s Official ‌Journal.
Regions where the planting season is already underway are showing early signs of stress.
Farmers in ⁠Australia — the ⁠third largest wheat exporter — are planting less this year, risking a harvest that is up to 40 percent smaller. Across Asia, rice supply is expected to fall this year due to the Iran war and an emerging El Nino.
The EU imported 2 million tons of ammonia and 5.9 million tons of urea in 2024, the statement said, and 6.7 million tons of nitrogen-based fertilizers and mixtures containing nitrogen.
The Middle East accounts for a small share of this volume. According to the European Commission, the EU’s direct dependence on the Middle East is about 3 percent for ammonia and 1-2 percent for nitrogen fertilizers.