The vision? Chemical-free fields feeding the nation and earning praise. The reality? A disaster. Rice yields plunged 53%, forcing Sri Lanka—once self-sufficient—to import food. As prices soared and the economy collapsed, protesters stormed the presidential palace in mid-2022. The government quickly reversed course.
Sri Lanka’s fiasco proves a hard truth: chemical fertilisers are the backbone of global agriculture. They’ve sustained billions, yet their importance is often ignored—until they’re gone. People fear their environmental impact, but the alternative is far worse. What would a world without them look like?
The Green Revolution
Before the 20th century, agriculture relied on manure and compost, limiting yields and severely restricting population growth in regions with poor soil quality. The Green Revolution transformed farming with synthetic fertilisers, high-yield crops, pesticides, and advanced irrigation. The Haber-Bosch process enabled mass fertiliser production, turning infertile land into productive farmland.
Brazil’s Cerrado, once barren due to acidic soils, became a top soybean producer after soil correction and fertilisers in the 1960s. In India, the Green Revolution turned famine-prone Punjab into a bread-basket. China, now the largest fertiliser consumer, relies on synthetic inputs for high rice and wheat yields. Today, fertilisers sustain nearly half the world’s population and were key to the 20th century’s population boom—from 1.6 billion in 1900 to over 8 billion today, with most growth in the developing world, where improved agriculture drove rapid expansion.
Everything Comes With A Price
However, excessive fertiliser use comes at a cost. Nitrogen and phosphorus runoff fuels algal blooms and ‘dead zones,’ devastating marine life. Nitrate pollution in drinking water poses health risks, including methemoglobinemia.
Decades of fertiliser overuse are degrading soils and harming ecosystems. In China, widespread overuse has acidified millions of hectares of farmland, forcing farmers to apply even more fertilisers to maintain yields. Similar degradation is occurring in parts of India and the U.S. Midwest, where long-term chemical use has reduced organic matter and made soils increasingly dependent on artificial inputs.
Another concern is the availability of synthetic fertilisers, as their key ingredients—nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium—come from finite resources with varying risks. Nitrogen is abundant but heavily reliant on natural gas, making it vulnerable to energy crises. Phosphorus, mined from Morocco, China, and the U.S., could face depletion within 50-100 years, with no synthetic alternative. Potassium, sourced mainly from Canada, Russia, and Belarus, is geopolitically sensitive, with supply disruptions affecting global markets.
These concerns are not just theoretical. The Ukraine war exposed the fragility of global food production, with fertiliser supply shocks sending prices soaring. In early 2022, sanctions on Russia and Belarus—responsible for 20% of global fertiliser exports—sent prices soaring, hitting developing nations hardest. The crisis worsened food insecurity, leaving West Africa and the Sahel at risk of famine. Fortunately, a full-scale food crisis was averted—but the warning signs remain.
What Can We Do To Mitigate The Impacts?
As concerns over fertiliser dependency grow, some states are taking steps to address the issue. The EU Green Deal aims to cut fertiliser use by 20% by 2030 through the Farm to Fork Strategy, promoting organic alternatives and reducing reliance on imports, especially from Russia. While intended to boost sustainability, the plan faces pushback over food security concerns.
China is also working to optimise fertiliser use, with a decade-long study showing that tailored application techniques can increase yields while reducing environmental impact. Meanwhile, Israel promotes sustainable agriculture through government-backed programs that encourage organic farming and improved nutrient management.
While these efforts exist, they remain minor in the grand scheme of global agriculture, with most farming still heavily reliant on synthetic fertilisers. China, by far the world’s largest fertiliser consumer, exemplifies this contradiction—despite research into more efficient use, its agricultural system remains deeply dependent on chemical inputs.
Are Fertilisers The Lesser Evil?
The world grapples with a dilemma that goes beyond environmental concerns—it strikes at the very foundation of modern civilisation. Technological progress has fueled an unprecedented population boom, yet ever-increasing consumption of energy, food, and natural resources places mounting strain on the planet. Fearing collapse, many push for drastic cuts to emissions, fertilisers, and industrial practices, warning of climate catastrophe and ecological ruin.
Yet while these dangers are real, so are the consequences of extreme solutions. Our World in Data estimates that without synthetic fertilisers, the world could sustain fewer than 4 billion people. The reality is stark: massively slashing fertiliser use would trigger famine and death on an unimaginable scale.
The challenge ahead is not just reducing impact but ensuring humanity’s survival. Fertilisers, industry, and modern agriculture sustain billions—dismantling them without viable alternatives is not a solution but a death sentence. The planet must be protected, but not at the cost of mass starvation and collapse. A world without fertilisers is not a greener future—it is a graveyard.
Statement
The global food system stands on a fragile foundation. Synthetic fertilisers, once a revolutionary force behind soaring agricultural yields and population growth, now face growing scrutiny. Their overuse depletes soil, pollutes water, and accelerates climate change, yet their absence would spell catastrophe. Without them, global food production would collapse, pushing billions toward starvation. Efforts to curb dependency remain marginal, while supply chain disruptions, like those seen during the Ukraine war, expose vulnerabilities. Sustainability is crucial, but dismantling industrial agriculture without alternatives is reckless. A world without fertilizers is not an environmental victory—it is a disaster in the making.