A major supplier of an ingredient in glyphosate — an herbicide that’s widely used by corn, soy, cotton and other farmers around the world — shut down production due to mechanical failures, and repairs could take three months. Bayer AG, the maker of Roundup, whose active ingredient is glyphosate, declared a force majeure on Feb. 11, meaning it may not be able to meet its sales agreements.

That’s likely going to lead to a supply crunch, according to a an emailed statement by U.K.-based analysis company AgbioInvestor, as well as higher prices at a time when farmers are already experiencing soaring costs for everything from seeds to fertilizers. Rising production costs are part of what’s behind near-record global food prices.

“These impacts will place farmers under further pressure in a number of key markets” where costs are up, according to the statement.

Read more: Bayer Says Glyphosate Production Hurt by Supplier Failure


Farmers are anxious. Aprosoja, an association of soybean producers in Brazil’s top-producing state Mato Grosso, sent a letter to Bayer’s chief executive officer in Brazil asking for assurances that there will be no shortages of glyphosate. Over 90% of soybeans grown in Brazil are genetically modified to resist glyphosate. 

“Problems within industrial structures are not atypical events, and that’s why corporations as big as Bayer have contingency plans” that the group wants to be informed of, Aprosoja’s president Fernando Cadore said in the letter.

Bayer has previously said that glyphosate pricing gained 25% between January 2021 and November, and the company expected prices to keep rising. 


Pesticide Prices Are Rising, Hindering Farmers

With More Costs


Elizabeth Elkin
Wed., February 9, 2022, 


(Bloomberg) -- Farmers are going to be paying more for herbicides and pesticides as they grapple with higher costs for fertilizer, seeds and fuel.

Agriculture chemical company FMC Corp. said it’s raising prices to counter what Chief Executive Officer Mark Douglas called “significant” increased costs for making and distributing crop protection products. The move follows similar efforts announced last week by U.S. rival, Corteva Inc.

“Quite frankly, there’s not a lot of choice here,” Douglas said Wednesday during FMC’s quarterly earnings call.

Costs for materials used by the agricultural industry have risen during the last several months, putting strain on producers and raising concern for further inflation when food prices are already near record highs.

FMC shares rose as much as 7.6% in New York trading on Wednesday, its biggest intraday increase in three months. Corteva rose as much as 2.1% to reach a new record high of $51.41.


https://libcom.org/files/Bookchin M. Our Synthetic Environment.pdf · PDF file

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