The World Bank has projected a sharp 60% increase in global urea prices in 2026, a development that could significantly strain agricultural systems and intensify food inflation across emerging and low-income economies.
Urea, a nitrogen-based fertilizer widely used to boost crop yields, is a critical input for staple food production. A surge of this magnitude signals rising costs for farmers at a time when many are already grappling with volatile energy markets and currency pressures.
The World Bank attributes the expected price spike primarily to tightening global supply and elevated natural gas costs, the key feedstock in urea production. Disruptions in major exporting regions, coupled with export restrictions in some countries, are also compounding supply constraints.
For developing economies, where agriculture accounts for a substantial share of employment and GDP, the implications are immediate and far-reaching. Higher fertilizer prices typically lead farmers to reduce application rates, which in turn lowers crop yields. This dynamic risks deepening food insecurity and pushing up consumer prices.
“Fertilizer affordability is a central determinant of agricultural productivity,” analysts note. “A sustained price increase of this scale could reverse recent gains in food supply stability.”
The inflationary impact is likely to be most acute in import dependent nations across sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia. In these regions, governments often subsidize fertilizers to support domestic food production. A sharp increase in global prices could widen fiscal deficits or force policymakers to scale back support, passing costs directly onto farmers.
Market participants are also watching the potential spillover effects. Rising urea prices could lift broader fertilizer benchmarks, reinforcing a cycle of higher input costs across the agricultural value chain. This, in turn, may feed into global food prices, complicating central banks’ efforts to manage inflation.
From an investment perspective, the outlook presents a mixed picture. Fertilizer producers may benefit from improved margins, particularly those with access to lower-cost natural gas. However, downstream sectors including food processors and retailers could face margin compression as input costs rise faster than consumer demand can absorb.
Looking ahead, policymakers face limited but critical options. Strategic stockpiling, targeted subsidies, and efforts to boost domestic fertilizer production may offer partial relief. At the same time, longer-term solutions such as improving soil efficiency and investing in alternative fertilizers are gaining renewed attention.
The World Bank’s warning underscores a broader vulnerability in the global food system: its reliance on energy-intensive inputs. As price volatility in commodities persists, the intersection between energy markets and food security is set to remain a defining economic challenge into 2026 and beyond.




