Strait of Hormuz blockade cuts fertiliser shipments to India
Change
A blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has halted seaborne deliveries of urea and fertiliser raw materials to India, tightening supplies ahead of the June–July sowing season.
Why it matters
Gulf-sourced shipments that normally transit the Hormuz corridor are now unreliable for the May–July procurement window, reducing predictable arrival times. Import-dependent buyers and state distributors face a compressed window to secure and move stock before farmers begin planting.
Implications
- • Fertiliser procurement teams at India’s importers must accelerate cargo liftings and contract alternative suppliers outside Gulf transits — if they do not, critical shipments will not arrive before the May–July sowing season.
- • State fertiliser distribution agencies must increase buffer allocations and reallocate existing domestic stocks toward northern grain-producing states by May — otherwise local dealers will face stockouts when farmers start buying urea.
Unlock the decision layer.
See the impact, exposure, and timing behind every binding change.
- Implications: What changes downstream.
- Who is affected: Which teams or operators are exposed.
- What to watch: Deadlines, triggers, and what needs attention next.
- Real-time alerts: Know when a binding change is published.
- Ask AI: Clarify any change in context.
14-day free trial · Full access · No credit card required
Start free trial
Source
Topics