The Hidden Bottleneck: How Global Fertilizer Logistics Drives the Crisis

Nitrogen fertilizer has already emerged as one of the most volatile inputs in modern agriculture. As discussed in our previous article, rising prices and constrained supply have reshaped how farmers plan their seasons and manage risk.

But there is a deeper layer to this crisis, one that is often overlooked.

It is not only about how much fertilizer is produced.
It is about how it moves.

Because in today’s globalized system, fertilizer is not consumed where it is produced. It travels across continents through ports, pipelines, and shipping lanes before it ever reaches the field. And when that movement is disrupted, the consequences ripple across the entire agricultural system.

Read More

The Global Nitrogen Fertilizer Crisis and How Precision Data Changes the Equation

Nitrogen remains the backbone of modern agriculture. It is the nutrient most closely tied to plant growth, yield formation, and ultimately farm profitability. Yet, as explored in our previous article “Why Nitrogen Is Still the Most Expensive Guess in Farming”, it is also one of the least precisely managed inputs in the field.

Today that uncertainty is no longer just an agronomic challenge, it has become a global economic risk.

Read More

Why Nitrogen Is Still the Most Expensive Guess in Farming

For decades, nitrogen has been one of the most powerful drivers of crop productivity. It fuels plant growth, supports protein formation, and directly influences yield potential. Few inputs have such a direct and measurable impact on farm performance.

And yet, despite its importance, nitrogen management in many parts of the world is still based largely on estimates.

Even today, as agriculture becomes increasingly digital, many fertilization decisions continue to rely on historical averages, regional recommendations, and intuition developed over years of experience. Satellite imagery, connected machinery, and farm management platforms are now widely available, but when it comes to nitrogen, guesswork often remains the foundation.

In an industry where margins are tight and input prices remain volatile, this reality has consequences. Quite simply, nitrogen has become one of the most expensive “guesses” in modern farming.

Read More

Wichtige Bodeneigenschaften in der Landwirtschaft: Bodentextur

Autorin: Eleni Baka, M.Sc.

In diesem Teil unserer neuen wissenschaftlichen Artikelserie “Wichtige Bodeneigenschaften in der Landwirtschaft” wird das Thema “Bodentextur” näher betrachtet. In dem Artikel steht nicht nur der Begriff “Bodentextur” im Vordergrund, die auch als “Bodenart” bezeichnet wird, sondern auch ihre Bestimmung und Bewertung in der Landwirtschaft.

Read More

Ergebnisse der Bodenuntersuchung und Planung der Düngung vor Ort

Mit dem FarmLab ist ein neues System auf dem Markt, das erstmals eine komplette Bodenuntersuchung innerhalb kürzester Zeit vor Ort durchführt. Ohne großen Aufwand ermöglicht es, beliebig viele Messungen von Nmin, Nitratstickstoff, Phosphat, Magnesium, pH, Bodenfeuchte, Bodentemperatur, Textur, Humusgehalt und anderen Parametern im Oberboden vorzunehmen. Anhand der Daten, die das FarmLab ermittelt, kann direkt vor Ort die Düngung angepasst werden.

Read More