
A farmer has said the increase in the cost of fertiliser means he will be better off selling what he already has rather than using it to grow crops.
The war in the Middle East has driven up the price of fertiliser as a third of the world's key fertiliser chemicals pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
Olly Harrison, who farms in Tarbock, on Merseyside, said he bought his fertiliser for a good price last year and now believes - due to a wet and cold spring and limited growing days left, added with the costs of diesel for machinery - he may be better off not planting.
"We'd actually make more money selling it than putting it on the crop that it was intended for," he said.
"And to replace that fertiliser would cost a lot of money and I will have to buy some for next year's crops."
Olly said he bought his current supply of fertiliser last June at about £340 a tonne.
"It's upwards of £700 now.
"We've had a cold spring and a wet spring and we've still got some corn not in the ground," he said.
'At the mercy' of importing
"If you're thinking that you may be getting 100 days to grow a crop in the spring and we're probably already 30 days late, we're down to 70 days worth of growing that crop.
"So, putting fertiliser on it won't help because there's just not enough daylight hours.
"And then having the expense of diesel putting the crop in the ground, and then hoping that we're going to get the perfect weather to get a crop off it anyway... you start to think, is this worth doing?"
Olly, who is the fifth generation of his family to farm on the site, said after the closure of a fertiliser factory in nearby Wirral about three years ago he had become "completely at the mercy of imported fertiliser just to grow crops".
"Each time there is turmoil in the world, whether it's when it kicked off in Ukraine and Russia or some of the fallout from Covid with expensive machinery, it just, effects the input costs and the cost to grow food now," he said.
"It's just getting out of control."
He added: "Every year of farming, it seems like double or quits.
"We feel like we're gambling all the time and the stakes keep getting higher."
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
What an expert on the gut microbiome eats in a day - 2
Sound Maturing: Wellbeing Tips for Each Life Stage - 3
Ancient meditation practices find new life in modern religious communities across America - 4
Which Breakfast Enraptures Your Taste Buds? Vote - 5
‘And then we saw the little head.’ Scientists witness rare sperm whale birth
The Best Games On the planet
Going on a bad date is a drag. Worse? Ending up as a cautionary tale on TikTok.
German journalists' union condemns attack on reporters in village
It Looks Like a Tiny, Fluffy Dragon, But It's Really a Bird. Meet the Great Eared Nightjar
The Best Web-based Courses for Expertise Improvement
Doctors say changes to US vaccine recommendations are confusing parents and could harm kids
3 astronauts settle into their new life in orbit | On the International Space Station this week Dec. 1-5, 2025
San Francisco sues 10 companies that make ultraprocessed food
James Webb Space Telescope discovers a lemon-shaped exoplanet unlike anything seen before: 'What the heck is this?'













