Nutrien sees no major impact from Black Sea deal

By 
Ed White

Published: March 26, 2025

,

Photo: Liam O’Connor

Winnipeg | Reuters — Nutrien said on Wednesday it doesn’t think the proposed Black Sea shipping deal between Ukraine, Russia and the U.S. will significantly affect the North American or global fertilizer market this year.

“We do not expect the announced agreements will have a material impact on global supplies of fertilizers or grains in 2025,” said Nutrien spokesperson Shawn Churchill in a statement to Reuters.

“Russian fertilizer exports have largely adapted to the restrictions that were in place and are already operating near full capacity.”

Read Also

A Pakistan Navy ship escorts a Pakistani merchant vessel, as part of a maritime security operation, named Muhafiz-ul-Bahr, as regional tensions threaten key sea routes, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, at an unidentified location, released March 9, 2026, in this screen grab taken from a handout video. Photo: ISPR/Handout via REUTERS

Russia stops ammonium nitrate exports for one month amid global supply crunch

Russia, which controls up to 40 per cent of the global trade in ammonium nitrate, said on Tuesday it will stop exports of the fertilizer for one month until April 21 to ensure sufficient supply during the spring planting season.

Nutrien, the world’s top potash producer, believes there is little potential for increased exports from Russia and Ukraine in the short term.

The three-country Black Sea deal has an unclear future. Russia has listed conditions required for it to comply with it, including lifting some restrictions on Russian banks, and much commercial traffic has already been occurring despite the military conflict.

Russian and Belarusian potash and other fertilizers have been struggling to get out into world markets since European Union nations imposed restrictions on exports from those countries; Ukrainian ports are on the other side of the war line; and Russian Black Sea exports have been sailing through a war zone. However, alternate routes have been developed, allowing fertilizer to reach many buyers.

— Additional reporting by Tristan Veyet in Gdansk

About the author

Ed White

Reporter

Reporter for Reuters, formerly for The Western Producer, in Winnipeg.

explore

Stories from our other publications