Fertiliser Price Tracker

Flatlander

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lorette Manitoba
Why aren't we buying fert off the yanks their gas is cheap in comparison
The gas maybe cheaper than in some places but wit the cost of making it and moving it around the world it’s no longer cheap. N is made two hours from here but still high priced. Mine was trucked from a rail yard that brought it from Minneapolis. And from there apparently it’s came up the Mississippi from the southern ports. Must have been made from cheap gas somewhere.
 

bobk

Member
Location
stafford
The gas maybe cheaper than in some places but wit the cost of making it and moving it around the world it’s no longer cheap. N is made two hours from here but still high priced. Mine was trucked from a rail yard that brought it from Minneapolis. And from there apparently it’s came up the Mississippi from the southern ports. Must have been made from cheap gas somewhere.
What are your plans for next year , we're scratching our heads here , the wheat price could go tits up leaving a rather large black hole
 

Flatlander

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lorette Manitoba
What are your plans for next year , we're scratching our heads here , the wheat price could go tits up leaving a rather large black hole
More concerned with this year at the moment. Should be drilling by now but fields are still lakes. Water is starting to flow out but a long ways to go yet. Personally can’t see next year increasing in price. Fert or grain unless a couple of major growing regions have natural disasters. Biden gave the maize industry a boost by including more ethanol in petrol but that could be short lived if the greens learn it uses more fossil fuel than it saves. Wheat is starting to get price rationed. Pork and chicken prices will have to increase big time to make it viable to feed expensive wheat. PED in pods is on going and bird flu is increasing so locally feed wheat could be in less demand. That said hard red spring wheat hit an all time high here yesterday. As did canola. Oats have crashed Soys are running on the high side of the price range
 

bobk

Member
Location
stafford
More concerned with this year at the moment. Should be drilling by now but fields are still lakes. Water is starting to flow out but a long ways to go yet. Personally can’t see next year increasing in price. Fert or grain unless a couple of major growing regions have natural disasters. Biden gave the maize industry a boost by including more ethanol in petrol but that could be short lived if the greens learn it uses more fossil fuel than it saves. Wheat is starting to get price rationed. Pork and chicken prices will have to increase big time to make it viable to feed expensive wheat. PED in pods is on going and bird flu is increasing so locally feed wheat could be in less demand. That said hard red spring wheat hit an all time high here yesterday. As did canola. Oats have crashed Soys are running on the high side of the price range
Kin hell , nearly May and nowt in the ground , puts it in perspective
 

BrianV

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Dartmoor
The UK government has now removed tariffs on US maize & also removed all tariffs on Ukrainian imports including cereals, if Ukraine some how manages to carry on exporting cereals & the EU retain those tariffs just wondering if anyone has any idea how that might affect cereal prices here in the UK & should we be concerned?

.......................

EU and UK import tariff rates for selected cereals and oilseeds and derived products​

The below table details the respective tariff rates the EU and the UK apply to selected cereals, oilseeds and derived products unless:
We have calculated the percentage increase in price that these tariffs will add to the cost of imported products and compared them to the EU’s common external tariff. As the UK and EU have agreed a trade deal these tariffs do not apply to trade between the two parties.


CodeProductEU tariff rateUK tariff rate
10Cereals
10011900Durum wheat (excluding seed for sowing)€148/tonne*Free
10019120Seed of wheat€95/tonne*Free
10019900Wheat and meslin (excluding seed for sowing)€95/tonne79 GBP/1000kg
10031000Seed of barley€93/tonne77 GBP/1000kg
10039000Barley (excluding seed for sowing)€93/tonne77 GBP/1000kg
10041000Seed of oats€89/tonne74 GBP/1000kg
10049000Oats (excluding seed for sowing)€89/tonne74 GBP/1000kg
10059000Maize (excluding seed for sowing)€94/tonne*Free
11Products of the Milling Industry
11010015Flour of common wheat and spelt€172/tonne143 GBP/1000kg
11041290Flaked oat grains€182/tonne152 GBP/1000kg
11071099Malt (excluding roasted, wheat and flour)€131/tonne109 GBP/1000kg
11081200Maize starch€166/tonne138 GBP/1000kg
11090000Wheat gluten€512/tonne428 GBP/1000kg
 

bobk

Member
Location
stafford
The UK government has now removed tariffs on US maize & also removed all tariffs on Ukrainian imports including cereals, if Ukraine some how manages to carry on exporting cereals & the EU retain those tariffs just wondering if anyone has any idea how that might affect cereal prices here in the UK & should we be concerned?

.......................

EU and UK import tariff rates for selected cereals and oilseeds and derived products​

The below table details the respective tariff rates the EU and the UK apply to selected cereals, oilseeds and derived products unless:
We have calculated the percentage increase in price that these tariffs will add to the cost of imported products and compared them to the EU’s common external tariff. As the UK and EU have agreed a trade deal these tariffs do not apply to trade between the two parties.


CodeProductEU tariff rateUK tariff rate
10Cereals
10011900Durum wheat (excluding seed for sowing)€148/tonne*Free
10019120Seed of wheat€95/tonne*Free
10019900Wheat and meslin (excluding seed for sowing)€95/tonne79 GBP/1000kg
10031000Seed of barley€93/tonne77 GBP/1000kg
10039000Barley (excluding seed for sowing)€93/tonne77 GBP/1000kg
10041000Seed of oats€89/tonne74 GBP/1000kg
10049000Oats (excluding seed for sowing)€89/tonne74 GBP/1000kg
10059000Maize (excluding seed for sowing)€94/tonne*Free
11Products of the Milling Industry
11010015Flour of common wheat and spelt€172/tonne143 GBP/1000kg
11041290Flaked oat grains€182/tonne152 GBP/1000kg
11071099Malt (excluding roasted, wheat and flour)€131/tonne109 GBP/1000kg
11081200Maize starch€166/tonne138 GBP/1000kg
11090000Wheat gluten€512/tonne428 GBP/1000kg
That wouldn't have happened under the EU rules
 

teslacoils

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire
Ukraine has 20m tons ready to go?

Port undamaged so far.

BBC News - Ukraine war: Farmers stretched to the brink in Odesa

Market could drop again very quickly.
Mmmmm. Lovely Ukrainian wheat been in one of their silos for a year.

There are no boats out of Odessa. Not now. Perhaps no more Ukrainian boats out of Odessa....ever.
 

AT Aloss

Member
NFFN Member
The UK government has now removed tariffs on US maize & also removed all tariffs on Ukrainian imports including cereals, if Ukraine some how manages to carry on exporting cereals & the EU retain those tariffs just wondering if anyone has any idea how that might affect cereal prices here in the UK & should we be concerned?

.......................

EU and UK import tariff rates for selected cereals and oilseeds and derived products​

The below table details the respective tariff rates the EU and the UK apply to selected cereals, oilseeds and derived products unless:
We have calculated the percentage increase in price that these tariffs will add to the cost of imported products and compared them to the EU’s common external tariff. As the UK and EU have agreed a trade deal these tariffs do not apply to trade between the two parties.


CodeProductEU tariff rateUK tariff rate
10Cereals
10011900Durum wheat (excluding seed for sowing)€148/tonne*Free
10019120Seed of wheat€95/tonne*Free
10019900Wheat and meslin (excluding seed for sowing)€95/tonne79 GBP/1000kg
10031000Seed of barley€93/tonne77 GBP/1000kg
10039000Barley (excluding seed for sowing)€93/tonne77 GBP/1000kg
10041000Seed of oats€89/tonne74 GBP/1000kg
10049000Oats (excluding seed for sowing)€89/tonne74 GBP/1000kg
10059000Maize (excluding seed for sowing)€94/tonne*Free
11Products of the Milling Industry
11010015Flour of common wheat and spelt€172/tonne143 GBP/1000kg
11041290Flaked oat grains€182/tonne152 GBP/1000kg
11071099Malt (excluding roasted, wheat and flour)€131/tonne109 GBP/1000kg
11081200Maize starch€166/tonne138 GBP/1000kg
11090000Wheat gluten€512/tonne428 GBP/1000kg
That wouldn't have happened under the EU rules
One thing's for sure, I don't think Ukraine is going to give much of a fig about meeting net zero targets anytime soon...
 

Flatlander

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lorette Manitoba
Kin hell , nearly May and nowt in the ground , puts it in perspective
truth be told we’ve had two early years fir planting. normally the first few days of may would be normal. 25th of April and your neighbours are panicking if your in the field planting. Canola around the 15th is about right and soys 25th of may seems to be best soil is warm and season still long enough to avoid frost either end of the year.
 

robbie

Member
BASIS
I've had a few issues again this year with origin product, both AN and urea.
I've spoke to 4 different people within origin aswell as a 2 different chaps at KRM and everytime, by every single one of them I've been told different things about the make/manufacturing country of my products. I've been told my AN was UK, Lithuanian and russian and the same for the urea. I think I've finally got it sorted and have set the spreader right but it makes a mockery of Tracablity and FIAS ect.........Is FIAS run by RT????🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
 

SFI - What % were you taking out of production?

  • 0 %

    Votes: 105 40.5%
  • Up to 25%

    Votes: 94 36.3%
  • 25-50%

    Votes: 39 15.1%
  • 50-75%

    Votes: 5 1.9%
  • 75-100%

    Votes: 3 1.2%
  • 100% I’ve had enough of farming!

    Votes: 13 5.0%

May Event: The most profitable farm diversification strategy 2024 - Mobile Data Centres

  • 1,774
  • 32
With just a internet connection and a plug socket you too can join over 70 farms currently earning up to £1.27 ppkw ~ 201% ROI

Register Here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-mo...2024-mobile-data-centres-tickets-871045770347

Tuesday, May 21 · 10am - 2pm GMT+1

Location: Village Hotel Bury, Rochdale Road, Bury, BL9 7BQ

The Farming Forum has teamed up with the award winning hardware manufacturer Easy Compute to bring you an educational talk about how AI and blockchain technology is helping farmers to diversify their land.

Over the past 7 years, Easy Compute have been working with farmers, agricultural businesses, and renewable energy farms all across the UK to help turn leftover space into mini data centres. With...
Top