The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has created a critical 3-month window for global food security, as one-third of all seaborne fertilizer passes through this waterway; with fertilizer prices surging 80% and multiple supply chain disruptions including bird flu affecting 185 million birds, farm bankruptcies, and labor shortages, the video warns that American households face significant food price increases and potential shortages by summer 2026, as the fertilizer shortage directly impacts crop yields (20% less fertilizer produces 15-25% less yield) and the USDA's 3.1% food price projection is now obsolete.
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What Happens To Americans This Summer?Añadido:
On April 2nd, 2026, Foreign Policy Magazine published a piece with a sentence that should have stopped every American cold. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization predicted no more than a 3-month window for action before risks escalate significantly, affecting global planting decisions for 2026 and beyond. 3 months, that was the window. And when the UN Secretary General appointed an emergency envoy to lead the response, he used language that sounded like a wartime dispatch, he said the prolonged closure of the strait is choking the movement of oil, gas, and fertilizer at a critical moment in the global planting season. Choking, not slowing, not delaying, choking. And here is what you need to understand about that word and why it applies directly to the food on your table this summer.
Onethird of all fertilizer that is shipped by sea passes through the straight of Hormuz. Not onethird of Middle Eastern fertilizer, onethird of all seaborn fertilizer on planet Earth.
Ammonia, ura, sulfur, the chemical building blocks that modern agriculture cannot function without. And the strait has been closed or severely restricted since February 28th when the United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran and Iran responded by mining and blockading the waterway. That was 48 days ago. The three-month window the FAO identified started in early March. Which means roughly half of that window has already closed. And every day the straight remains blocked is a day that fertilizer does not reach the farms that need it for the summer growing season that is happening right now, not next year. Right now, the seeds are going in the ground right now with less fertilizer available and at higher cost than at any point since the 2022 crisis.
And the food that grows from those seeds or fails to grow is the food that will be on your grocery store shelf in August, September, and October or will not be on your shelves. And you are watching this video right now today because there is still time to understand what is coming and to prepare your household before the shelves tell the story for themselves. And I want to be very specific with you about what fighting over food means because it is not a metaphor. In the Gulf Cooperation Council states where 80% of caloric intake is imported through the straight of Hormuz 70% of food imports were disrupted within weeks of the closure.
Retailers like Lulu Retail were forced to airlift staples into the country.
Consumer prices for basic food items spiked 40 to 120%. In the Philippines, Haiti, India, Ireland, and the United Kingdom. The war-driven rise in food and fuel prices has triggered protests and strikes. The UK Food and Drink Federation said food inflation is now expected to reach at least 9% by the end of 2026. The Bank of England reported that businesses fear food inflation could reach 6 to 7%. And by 2026, over 70% of global agricultural output remain directly dependent on fossil fuel inputs. Whether through mechanization, fertilizer synthesis, transport, logistics, or storage infrastructure, every calorie in the modern food system is connected to oil. And oil just became 35% more expensive overnight because of a war that closed the waterway through which 1/5if of the world's petroleum and onethird of its seaborn fertilizer flows. The Americans watching this video right now are not yet feeling the worst of it. But you will. Fortune magazine published an article on April 9th titled a global food emergency that stated explicitly that American consumers are not facing the shortages other countries are seeing from the war but they will be hit in the pocketbook and that the effects on the food supply take longer to appear but they are coming. That sentence they are coming is why I am making this video right now in April before the summer arrives before the harvest data is in before the grocery shelves show the damage. Because by the time the damage is visible, the window to prepare will have already closed.
Fertilizer prices surged 80% and most Americans have no idea what that means for their dinner plate. Foodorg, a nonprofit food fact-checking platform, published a comprehensive analysis in April documenting that global fertilizer prices have surged 80% since the straight of Hormuz crisis began. CNBC reported on March 25th that fertilizer prices were surging amid the Iran war, sparking food security warnings from governments and international organizations across five continents.
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace published an analysis on March 11th warning that fertilizer is not getting through the straight of Hormuz, which could worsen global food prices.
and Breakwave Advisers, a commodity market research firm, published a detailed assessment on March 10th documenting what they called the Hormuz disruption and the emerging fertilizer shock. Here is what an 80% fertilizer price surge means in plain English for American food. Modern agriculture is essentially the conversion of fossil fuels into calories. Nitrogen fertilizer is synthesized from natural gas through the habberbos process. Phosphorus and potassium are mined and processed using diesel-powered equipment. The fertilizer is transported by diesel trucks to farms. The farms apply it using diesel-powered spreaders. The crops grow because the fertilizer provides the nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium that the soil cannot provide in sufficient quantities on its own. Without fertilizer, crop yields drop by approximately 40 to 50% depending on the crop and the soil quality. With expensive fertilizer, yields may be maintained, but the cost of production rises by 15 to 25%.
Which is passed directly to the consumer. And the USDA projected a 3.1% average increase for all food prices in 2026. But that projection was made using data from before the Iran war began.
That 3.1% number is already obsolete.
Fortune reported on April 9th that American consumers are not facing the gas and food shortages other countries are seeing from the war, but they will be hit in the pocketbook, and that the effects on the food supply take longer to appear, but they are coming. A professor of international business at Florida International University confirmed that even when crops are bountiful in the United States, consumers are not immune to global economic forces and that a smaller 2026 crop with rising demand for livestock feed in China and India will put pressure on global corn prices affecting everyone regardless of nationality. The fertilizer shock is not a hypothesis. It is a chemical fact working its way through the biological timeline of the growing season. Seeds planted with 20% less fertilizer produce 15 to 25% less yield. And the yield reduction from spring 2026 planting will arrive at the American grocery store in late summer and early fall. And the specific crops most affected tell you exactly what will be more expensive and potentially scarce. Corn, which is the foundation of the American food system because it feeds the cattle, the pigs, the chickens, and the farmed fish that provide the protein on your plate, is the most fertilizer dependent crop in American agriculture. A corn plant requires approximately one pound of nitrogen per bushel of expected yield.
An acre of corn that is expected to produce 180 bushels needs 180 lbs of nitrogen fertilizer. reduce the nitrogen application by 20% because of cost and the yield drops to approximately 140 to 150 bushels. Multiply that reduction across 90 million acres of corn planted in the United States and the total production shortfall is measured in hundreds of millions of bushels. That shortfall increases the price of every product downstream. feed costs for livestock, ethanol for blending into gasoline, corn syrup for processed food, corn starch for industrial use, and direct human consumption of corn products. Wheat and soybeans are similarly affected, though less nitrogen dependent. The compound effect across all major commodity crops is a food price increase that is baked into the growing season before the first year of corn is harvested in September. and crop yields in India and Brazil in 2026 are expected to be lower than normal according to Fortune, which means the global supply buffer that might otherwise offset an American shortfall does not exist this year. The world's bread baskets are all under pressure simultaneously. America, India, Brazil, East Africa, Ukraine, all producing less than normal for different reasons that are converging into a single global outcome. There will be less food available on Earth in the second half of 2026 than at any point since the 2022 crisis, and there will be more people competing for it. Food bank funding was cut by $500 million, and fresh food is being replaced with shelf stable junk, while the global food supply chain is being strangled by the Hormuz closure.
The domestic safety net that catches Americans when food becomes unaffordable is being dismantled. Simultaneously, the World's Socialist website reported that the administration cut funding for food banks by $500 million, causing what they described as a scarcity crisis and forcing food banks to replace fresh food with cheaper, lower nutrient alternatives. That $500 million cut came on top of the SNAP reductions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which slashed $295 billion in federal SNAP funding over the next decade. the largest reduction in the program's history.
Benefits are being cut by approximately $100 per month for roughly 600,000 low-income households. Work requirements are being expanded to include adults ages 55 to 64 for the first time. And the government shutdown that began on October 1st, 2025 disrupted SNAP distribution in at least 25 states. So the timeline looks like this. The global food supply is being constrained by a war that closed the world's most critical fertilizer shipping lane. Food prices are rising because of that constraint, plus the 21% gasoline increase and the 10.9% energy spike in March that is now working through the supply chain. The federal food assistance program that 40 million Americans depend on is being cut by the largest amount in its history. Food bank funding has been slashed by half a billion dollars. And all of this is converging on the summer months when school lunch programs shut down and 30 million children who receive free or reducedpric meals during the school year lose access to that daily nutrition. The USDA summer EBT program that was designed to fill that gap has been defunded or restricted in multiple states, which means that in July and August of 2026, food prices will be at their highest point since the pandemic.
SNAP benefits will be at their lowest in years. Food bank shelves will be thinner than at any point since co and 30 million children will lose their primary source of daily nutrition simultaneously.
That is not a policy debate. That is a hunger emergency and it is 75 days away.
And if you think this does not apply to you because you earn a middle class income and do not depend on SNAP or food banks, consider the math. The average American household spent $1,100 per month on groceries in 2025. A 10% increase driven by the war inflation cascade and the fertilizer-driven yield reduction would add $110 per month. $120 per year to your grocery bill on top of the 36% cumulative increase that has already occurred since 2014. on top of the 21% gasoline increase in March. On top of the auto insurance that is up 55%.
On top of the health insurance premiums that are up 77% since 2017 for ACA plans and 342% since 2000 for employer sponsored coverage. Every household in America is running a budget that was designed for a cost of living that no longer exists. And the food cost increase that is arriving this summer is the line item that pushes millions of households from stretched to broken.
Because food is the most compressible budget category for families that are already spending 40 to 50% of their income on housing. When the rent cannot be cut, the insurance cannot be cut. The car payment cannot be cut and the utilities cannot be cut. The only category left to absorb the shock is food. And absorbing the shock means buying less food. buying lower quality food, skipping meals, or going hungry.
That is not an abstract risk for low-income Americans. That is the lived experience of 14% of American households right now before the summer food crisis arrives. Bird flu has WIPD out 185 million poultry and crossed into dairy cattle and nobody is telling you how close it is to your plate. Since 2022, the highly pathogenic aven influenza has resulted in the culling of more than 185 million birds in the United States. The largest animal disease event in American history. Egg prices, which were already elevated before the current crisis, remain more than double their 2019 baseline in most markets. A dozen eggs that cost $1.50 50 in 2019, costs $4 to $6 in most American grocery stores today. And the virus has not stayed in poultry. It has crossed into dairy cattle across multiple states. The USDA has confirmed detections of H5N1 in dairy herds in more than 20 states. The virus has been found in commercial milk supply at trace levels that the FDA says are inactivated by pasteurization. But the presence of the virus in dairy herds means additional biocurity costs for dairy farmers. Potential herd culling if outbreaks intensify, disruption to milk production in affected regions, and the psychological impact on consumer confidence that reduces dairy demand even when the product is safe. Egg production has been disrupted multiple times by successive waves of the virus.
Each time a commercial laying facility is hit, the entire flock is called.
millions of birds at a time and it takes 12 to 18 months to rebuild the flock to full production capacity. That rebuild timeline means every major culling event in early 2026 reduces egg supply for the rest of the year. And egg supply was already constrained before the latest outbreaks because the national poultry flock has not fully recovered from the cumulative losses of the past four years. The American consumer has been told that egg prices are high because of supply and demand. That is technically correct, but radically incomplete. Egg prices are high because 185 million birds have been killed by a virus that is still circulating, still mutating, still crossing species barriers, and still hitting commercial facilities with enough frequency to prevent the national flock from rebuilding to pre-outbreak levels. And the cost of the biocurity measures required to protect the remaining flocks is itself adding to the price. ventilation upgrades, testing protocols, movement restrictions, quarantine procedures. Each one costs money that is passed to the consumer in the price of the egg, the chicken breast, and the turkey that you buy at the grocery store. And if H5N1 triggers a major dairy cattle culling event this summer, the disruption to milk, cheese, butter, yogurt, an ice cream supply would compound the egg and poultry disruption into a protein and dairy crisis that would push food inflation well above the already elevated trajectory. Farm bankruptcies climbed again in 2025, and American farmers are being squeezed out of existence. The American Farm Bureau Federation reported in February 2026 that farm bankruptcies continue to climb in 2025.
That report landed with almost no mainstream coverage because farm bankruptcies are a slow burn story that lacks the dramatic visual of an empty grocery shelf or a line at the food bank. But farm bankruptcies are the leading indicator of the empty shelf.
When a farm goes bankrupt, the land is either consolidated into a larger operation, converted to non-aggricultural use or left. Every farm that exits production reduces the total acreage producing food for the American market. And the farms that survive are doing so by cutting costs, which means applying less fertilizer, planting fewer acres of lower margin crops, reducing livestock herds, deferring equipment maintenance, and stretching operating lines of credit that are themselves becoming more expensive as interest rates remain elevated. The cattle herd in the United States has fallen to its lowest level in roughly 75 years. Beef prices are up approximately 15% year-over-year. The cow calf operations that produce the calves that become the steers that become the beef on your plate are being liquidated because the cost of feed, the cost of fuel, the cost of veterinary care, the cost of fencing and equipment, and the cost of labor have all risen faster than the price the rancher receives at the sail barn. And when a rancher sells their breeding stock, the herd reduction is not reversible in one season. It takes 3 to four years to rebuild a breeding herd because biology cannot be accelerated by market demand.
Every breeding cow sold in 2025 is a calf not born in 2026, not weaned in 2027, not fattened in 2028, and not on your plate until 2029 at the earliest.
The beef shortage that Americans will experience over the next 3 years is already locked in by the herd decisions that have already been made. and the government shutdown froze financial assistance to farmers during what Grist reported was the critical harvesting and crop planning season. An agricultural analyst quoted by Grist said that without adequate financial assistance from the federal government, the nation's food is on track to become more expensive and more limited in supply.
Not one or the other, both more expensive and more limited at the same time. And that assessment was made before the Iran war closed the straight of Hormuz and triggered the fertilizer crisis that is now compounding every other pressure on American agriculture.
And there is one more pressure on American food production that almost nobody is connecting to the food crisis.
Immigration enforcement actions have removed workers from agricultural operations across the country. The American farm labor force is heavily dependent on immigrant workers. In California, which produces more than onethird of the nation's vegetables and twothirds of its fruits and nuts, the agricultural workforce is estimated to be 50 to 70% undocumented. When workers are removed from the fields during planting season or harvest season, the crops do not wait. Strawberries that are not picked within 48 hours of ripening rot. Lettuce that is not harvested within a specific temperature window bolts and becomes unsailable. Tree fruit that is not thinned at the right developmental stage produces undersized fruit that cannot be sold at retail. The labor crisis is not about immigration politics. It is about whether the physical human labor required to plant, tend, and harvest the food you eat exists in sufficient quantity at the right time and in the right place. And at this moment in April 2026, the answer to that question is no. in multiple major agricultural regions. And every crop that is not planted because there are not enough workers to plant it is a crop that will not be harvested in August and will not be on your plate in September. The growing season does not wait for policy debates. It obeys the calendar and the calendar is already running. Panic buying feedback loops are already happening globally and Americans are 72 hours from empty shelves at any time. Activist Post published an analysis in April documenting the behavioral cascade that occurs when food supply disruptions become visible to consumers. The pattern is consistent across every food crisis in modern history. Day 1 through two, initial anomalies are ignored and normal purchasing behavior continues. Day 3 through 4, awareness spreads and panic buying begins with demand surging approximately 150% above baseline. Day 5 through 7, hoarding peaks with demand for staples hitting 280% of normal. Week two, market distortion sets in with selective availability based on access rather than supply. Week three and beyond, stabilization attempts begin with rationing discussions and informal distribution networks emerging. That behavioral cascade has already occurred in multiple countries affected by the Hormuz closure. Vietnam experienced fuel and food panic buying. Gulf Cooperation Council states saw food imports disrupted by 70%. Forcing retailers to airlift staples and triggering consumer price spikes of 40 to 120%. The Philippines, Haiti, India, Ireland, and the United Kingdom have all experienced war-driven food and fuel price protests.
And the critical number for the United States is 72 hours. American grocery stores operate on a just in time inventory model that maintains approximately 72 hours of stock on the shelf at any given time. 3 days that is the buffer between a functioning grocery system and a visibly empty shelf. And the buffer is maintained by a continuous flow of diesel-powered trucks delivering from regional distribution centers that are themselves supplied by the agricultural processing and import supply chains that are currently under simultaneous pressure from the war. the fertilizer shortage, the energy cost increase, the bird flu, the farm bankruptcy trend, and the labor disruptions caused by immigration enforcement actions that have removed workers from agricultural operations across the country. A single major disruption to any one of those supply chain inputs can trigger the panic buying cascade that empties shelves in 72 hours. If multiple inputs are disrupted simultaneously, which is what is currently happening, the probability of a visible shortage event that triggers the cascade rises from a tail risk to a plausible near-term scenario. And once panic buying begins, it becomes self-reinforcing.
The consumer who sees empty shelves buys more than they need because they do not know when the shelves will be restocked.
That excess purchasing creates more empty shelves which triggers more panic purchasing which creates more empty shelves. The feedback loop runs until either supply catches up with the hoarding inflated demand which takes weeks or until rationing is imposed which has not happened in the United States since World War II. And Americans have already demonstrated their capacity for panic buying within the past 6 years. In March of 2020, when COVID lockdowns were announced, grocery stores across America were stripped bare within 48 hours. Toilet paper disappeared for weeks. Flour and yeast were unavailable for months. Canned goods, rice, pasta, and frozen vegetables were rationed by major chains, including Walmart, Kroger, and Costco. The panic buying of 2020 occurred in response to a pandemic that did not actually disrupt the food supply chain. The supply chain was functioning.
The farms were producing, the trucks were running. The only disruption was consumer behavior. The sudden collective decision by 130 million households to buy two weeks of food instead of 3 days of food at the same time. That behavioral shift alone was enough to empty every shelf in the country. Now consider what happens if the same behavioral shift occurs in the context of an actual supply disruption. A disruption where fertilizer has been 80% more expensive for 4 months.
where farm labor has been depleted by enforcement actions. Where diesel costs have spiked 30% in a single month. Where the cattle herd is at a 75-year low.
Where 185 million birds have been called. Where food bank funding has been cut by $500 million. Where SNAP benefits have been reduced by the largest amount in program history. Where the government shutdown disrupted crop planning assistance during the critical planting window. and where the UN Food and Agriculture Organization has publicly warned that the three-month window for action before risks escalate significantly is already half closed. In 2020, panic buying emptied shelves with no supply disruption. In 2026, the supply disruption is real documented and accelerating. And the panic buying has not even started yet in the United States. when it starts, and it will start the moment a viral social media post shows an empty shelf in a major city grocery store. The 72-hour inventory buffer will evaporate faster than it did during CO because the underlying supply is weaker this time.
The shelves will empty and they will take longer to refill. And the households that stocked their pantries in April and May will eat. And the households that did not will be standing in the line at the food bank that just had its funding cut by $500 million.
That is not fear-mongering. That is the supply chain mathematics of a food system that operates with no margin, absorbing the largest convergence of supply side disruptions since World War II. Global food insecurity just hit 318 million people and American food insecurity is climbing toward pandemic levels. Food Facts.org reported that 318 million people worldwide now face crisis level hunger. The highest number ever recorded by the United Nations World Food Program. Famines have been officially confirmed in Gaza and Sudan.
East African farmers who struggled to afford fertilizer before the Hormuz crisis are now unable to access it at any price. India and Brazil, two of the world's largest food producers, are expected to deliver below normal crop yields in 2026. And the LNIO weather pattern that was forecast for 2026 is exacerbating drought conditions in key agricultural regions across the southern hemisphere. When 318 million people are food insecure globally, the demand for grain exports from the United States increases because American farms become the supplier of last resort for countries whose domestic production has failed. That increased export demand competes with domestic demand, which puts upward pressure on prices for American consumers. Every bushel of corn, every ton of wheat, every shipment of soybeans that is exported to a country whose harvest failed is a bushel. a ton or a shipment that is not available for American livestock feed.
American food processing or American grocery store shelves. And domestically, Perurdu University's Center for Food Demand Analysis documented that roughly 14% of US households reported food insecurity on average between January and October 2025, up from 12.5% in 2024.
In New York City, 40% of families cannot afford their weekly food costs, according to Robin Hood and Columbia University data. The Century Foundation found that one in three Americans, 34% skipped a meal in the past year due to cost. A growing number of Americans are using buy now pay later plans to finance their weekly groceries. and the combination of rising prices, reduced SNAP benefits, defunded food banks, school meal gaps, and the war-driven supply disruption that has not yet fully arrived in American grocery stores is creating the conditions for food insecurity rates to approach or exceed the levels seen during the worst months of the pandemic. The difference is that during the pandemic, the federal government expanded SNAP benefits, expanded school meal programs, sent stimulus checks, and funded food banks at emergency levels. In 2026, every one of those interventions is being cut, reversed, or defunded at the exact moment the food crisis is intensifying.
The safety net that caught Americans during the last food emergency is being dismantled during this one. And the summer of 2026 is when the dismantling and the emergency collide. Share this video with every American you know who feeds a family, depends on food assistance, or has elderly parents or young children who are vulnerable to food price increases and availability disruptions. The information in this video is the difference between a household that stocked its pantry in May and a household that discovers the shortage in August when the shelves have already been stripped by the people who were paying attention. Subscribe and turn on notifications. No spin, no party line, just the food supply and the truth about whether there will be enough of it to go around before this summer ends.
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