Regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.

Recent human population increase has been enabled by a massive expansion of global agricultural production. A key component of this "Green Revolution" has been application of inorganic fertilizers to produce and maintain high crop yields. However, the long-term sustainability of these prac...

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Main Authors: James J Elser, Timothy J Elser, Stephen R Carpenter, William A Brock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4006770?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a48d0f76a27a4fb8b09ffc238a4eabc02020-11-25T01:09:30ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0195e9399810.1371/journal.pone.0093998Regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.James J ElserTimothy J ElserStephen R CarpenterWilliam A BrockRecent human population increase has been enabled by a massive expansion of global agricultural production. A key component of this "Green Revolution" has been application of inorganic fertilizers to produce and maintain high crop yields. However, the long-term sustainability of these practices is unclear given the eutrophying effects of fertilizer runoff as well as the reliance of fertilizer production on finite non-renewable resources such as mined phosphate- and potassium-bearing rocks. Indeed, recent volatility in food and agricultural commodity prices, especially phosphate fertilizer, has raised concerns about emerging constraints on fertilizer production with consequences for its affordability in the developing world. We examined 30 years of monthly prices of fertilizer commodities (phosphate rock, urea, and potassium) for comparison with three food commodities (maize, wheat, and rice) and three non-agricultural commodities (gold, nickel, and petroleum). Here we show that all commodity prices, except gold, had significant change points between 2007-2009, but the fertilizer commodities, and especially phosphate rock, showed multiple symptoms of nonlinear critical transitions. In contrast to fertilizers and to rice, maize and wheat prices did not show significant signs of nonlinear dynamics. From these results we infer a recent emergence of a scarcity price in global fertilizer markets, a result signaling a new high price regime for these essential agricultural inputs. Such a regime will challenge on-going efforts to establish global food security but may also prompt fertilizer use practices and nutrient recovery strategies that reduce eutrophication.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4006770?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James J Elser
Timothy J Elser
Stephen R Carpenter
William A Brock
spellingShingle James J Elser
Timothy J Elser
Stephen R Carpenter
William A Brock
Regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.
PLoS ONE
author_facet James J Elser
Timothy J Elser
Stephen R Carpenter
William A Brock
author_sort James J Elser
title Regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.
title_short Regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.
title_full Regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.
title_fullStr Regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.
title_full_unstemmed Regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.
title_sort regime shift in fertilizer commodities indicates more turbulence ahead for food security.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Recent human population increase has been enabled by a massive expansion of global agricultural production. A key component of this "Green Revolution" has been application of inorganic fertilizers to produce and maintain high crop yields. However, the long-term sustainability of these practices is unclear given the eutrophying effects of fertilizer runoff as well as the reliance of fertilizer production on finite non-renewable resources such as mined phosphate- and potassium-bearing rocks. Indeed, recent volatility in food and agricultural commodity prices, especially phosphate fertilizer, has raised concerns about emerging constraints on fertilizer production with consequences for its affordability in the developing world. We examined 30 years of monthly prices of fertilizer commodities (phosphate rock, urea, and potassium) for comparison with three food commodities (maize, wheat, and rice) and three non-agricultural commodities (gold, nickel, and petroleum). Here we show that all commodity prices, except gold, had significant change points between 2007-2009, but the fertilizer commodities, and especially phosphate rock, showed multiple symptoms of nonlinear critical transitions. In contrast to fertilizers and to rice, maize and wheat prices did not show significant signs of nonlinear dynamics. From these results we infer a recent emergence of a scarcity price in global fertilizer markets, a result signaling a new high price regime for these essential agricultural inputs. Such a regime will challenge on-going efforts to establish global food security but may also prompt fertilizer use practices and nutrient recovery strategies that reduce eutrophication.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4006770?pdf=render
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