- The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization issued an extreme risk warning this week, indicating that due to the blockade of the Middle East energy chokepoint, disruption of imported production factors, and the resonance effect of a strong El Niño phenomenon, the global food security situation could experience systemic deterioration as soon as six months from now.
- Affected by the obstruction of supply chain restructuring, core agricultural areas in the Northern Hemisphere are facing a severe shortage of fertilizer quotas during the spring planting cycle. In the United States, up to 70% of farmers have reduced their capital expenditure on basic soil fertility due to high production factor prices.
- High-frequency yield models disclosed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture show that the estimated total winter wheat production this year has significantly declined by 21% compared to the same period in 2025, dropping to 15.6 billion bushels. The crop abandonment rate has crossed the 32% red line, reaching a historic low since 1972.
Chokepoint Blockade Causes Cross-Border Disruption of Fertilizer Elements
From the current global trade flow and production factor distribution network perspective, geopolitical conflicts have eroded the upstream agricultural supply chain, affecting core production links. Due to navigation obstructions in the Strait of Hormuz, this vital channel for exporting core raw materials for global fertilizers is essentially in a state of limited capacity. The global input index released by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization shows that due to cross-border logistics disruptions and decoupling of production capacity, millions of farmers in the Northern Hemisphere were unable to obtain sufficient fertilizer quotas during the critical spring planting window. The high landed prices exceed the financial capacity of most small and medium-sized agricultural entities, and this marginal lack of upstream production factors is becoming a certain variable for the downward trend in future agricultural product output.
Energy Price Pulses Systematically Increase Agricultural Logistics and Operating Costs
Alongside the disruption in fertilizer supply, the price trends in the crude oil and refined oil markets are exerting secondary pressure on the daily operating costs of agricultural entities. Currently, the diesel sector, which almost all modern agricultural machinery and field transfer equipment heavily rely on, is experiencing significant cost pulses. Data shows that the average diesel price across the United States has surged to $5.5 per gallon, and in California, a major agricultural state, this figure has exceeded $7.4. Given that California is the leading producer of fruits and vegetables in the U.S., the systematic increase in transportation and irrigation costs not only significantly narrows farm profit margins but also directly pushes up the consumer food price index at the retail end.
Extreme Drought Severely Impacts the Fundamentals of North American Agricultural Core Areas
In addition to the cost squeeze from inputs and energy, the natural meteorological conditions in the core agricultural areas of the United States are facing a historic deterioration. High-frequency precipitation monitoring data for the first three months of this year indicate that some major production areas in North America have experienced the driest early year phase on record, with soil moisture conditions in key areas like West Texas severely degraded. The latest supply and demand forecast report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture shows that due to drought-induced crop quality damage, the actual harvested area of winter wheat has shrunk to 22 million acres, with an abandonment rate exceeding 32%. This means that nearly one-third of the planted crops cannot enter the substantive harvest sequence, and the supply gap is rapidly worsening.
El Niño Phenomenon Probability Increase Amplifies Global Production Downward Expectations
The ultimate tail risk facing the global food system comes from the continuous upward revision of the probability of a super El Niño phenomenon by meteorological models. The latest assessment results from the U.S. National Weather Service and atmospheric science research teams indicate that the probability of this year evolving into the strongest El Niño event on record has suddenly surged from the previous 20% to 50%. Historical macro meteorological data shows that extreme El Niño phenomena typically cause severe imbalances in global precipitation distribution, leading to widespread drought or flood disasters in major agricultural exporting countries in the Southern Hemisphere. United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization officials have expressed cautious concern, believing that once meteorological variations overlap with the current fragile micro-production systems, the shock-absorbing buffer of the global food supply chain will face clearance pressure.




