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Sources say that China has tightened border inspections on fertilizer exports.

China has increased its customs inspections to enforce the new controls on fertilizer exports as the gap between domestic and foreign prices continues to widen after the disruptions caused by the closing of the Strait of Hormuz.

Three fertiliser traders, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the issue, said that customs inspections are now required for exports of?ammonium?sulphate, one of China's biggest fertilizer exports in terms of volume.

Two people said that the crackdown began after two customs officers in Qingdao, a port city located on China's eastern coast, identified exporters who were falsely declaring ammonium as sulphate when they actually meant urea or potash fertilisers.

A trader who works in the industry said, "Our ammonium-sulphate exports recently saw a very high inspection rate as a result."

Qingdao General Administration was unable to be reached after hours, and China's General Administration of Customs at Beijing did not respond to faxed inquiries sent outside of business hours. China, which shipped more than $13billion in fertilizer last year, is a major exporter of this product. However, exports are tightly regulated to protect farmers. Beijing restricted fertiliser exports last month ahead of spring planting season. Only a small range of products were excluded, most notably ammonium sulphate.

These bans have contributed towards the soaring prices of international fertilisers triggered by the Iran War, which has disrupted the flow through the Strait?Hormuz through which approximately a third of the globally traded urea?shipped?

Export restrictions and coal-based production systems have kept China's domestic prices well below the global average. This has created a large price gap that would make urea imports profitable if allowed.

Exports of urea are controlled through a quota-based system. Beijing usually waits until May to determine if there's a surplus before deciding how much can be exported abroad.

StoneX reports that China exported 4.9 million tonnes of urea last year, which is slightly below the historical norms of between 5 and 5.5 millions tons, which would normally account for around 10% global exports.

(source: Reuters)