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US to suspend some duties on phosphate fertilizer from Morocco

By Thomson Reuters Jun 29, 2026 | 7:37 PM

By Kanishka Singh

WASHINGTON, June 29 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump has authorized the temporary suspension of certain duties on phosphate fertilizer imported from Morocco, the White House ​said on Monday, as farmers grapple with shortages due ‌to the Iran war.

White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett said in March the Trump administration was seeking more sources of fertilizer. Supply from major producers in the Middle East was sharply cut by the closure of ‌the ​Strait of Hormuz.

“Global supply chains for ⁠phosphate fertilizer and fertilizer inputs, ⁠including imports of such products into the United States, have been disrupted in recent months by, among other things, conflicts in fertilizer-producing regions as well as trade actions taken ​by major fertilizer-producing countries,” Trump said in a proclamation released by the White House.

Currently, U.S. production of phosphate fertilizer is ⁠insufficient to support domestic agricultural food ⁠production after accounting for exports, Trump said in ​the proclamation.

The Trump administration is working with the private sector ​to expand domestic fertilizer manufacturing capacity, but those efforts will ‌take time to increase the supply materially, the president said, adding producers in countries like Morocco can supply phosphate fertilizers to the U.S. without disruption at this time.

Trump declared an emergency ⁠in the proclamation that he said authorized the temporary suspension of certain anti-dumping and countervailing duties in connection with imports of phosphate ⁠fertilizer from Morocco ‌for eight months or until the emergency is ⁠terminated, whichever occurred first.

After the U.S. and ​Israel attacked ‌Iran on February 28 and Iran responded ​by attacking ⁠Israel and Gulf states that host U.S. bases, the conflict severely disrupted fertilizer markets that analysts warned endangered food security for developing countries. Much of the world’s fertilizer is made in the Middle East.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh; Editing by Costas Pitas, Sonali Paul ​and Neil Fullick)