Fertilizer Research Act of 2025
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Fertilizer Research Act directs the Secretary of Agriculture, in consultation with the Economic Research Service Administrator, to publish a public USDA website report within one year. The report must explain fertilizer-industry factors that influence prices agricultural producers receive at the farm; show current and 25-year market size and value trends by fertilizer type; describe 25-year fertilizer pricing patterns; identify fertilizer imports by type, company, quantity, and country; analyze how antidumping and countervailing duties affect retail fertilizer prices; map manufacturing, distribution, retail, transportation, logistics, and natural-disaster supply-chain disruptions; evaluate concentration among U.S. fertilizer companies and any anticompetitive impacts; compare emerging fertilizers and technologies, including biological fertilizers, with conventional products on prices, crop-use efficiencies, and crop yields; assess regulatory burdens affecting production, distribution, and use; evaluate public price-reporting transparency and whether USDA should create a daily, weekly, or monthly industry price-reporting mechanism; recommend to Congress whether such a mechanism should be established; and describe projected market growth and economic or political risks. The report may not include confidential business information.
Who Benefits and How
Farmers benefit because the report would clarify how fertilizer market concentration, imports, duties, supply chains, and price reporting affect input costs and farm-level product prices. Agricultural policy researchers benefit from a consolidated public USDA report covering 25-year price, market, import, concentration, and regulatory trends. Congressional agriculture committees benefit from a recommendation on whether USDA should create mandatory fertilizer price reporting. Emerging fertilizer technology developers benefit because USDA must compare biological and other new fertilizer technologies against conventional products on price, efficiency, and yield.
Who Bears the Burden and How
USDA report staff must collect, analyze, and publish detailed fertilizer market data within one year. Economic Research Service analysts must support the report’s 25-year trend, concentration, import, and price-transparency analysis. Fertilizer manufacturers face public scrutiny of market concentration, pricing patterns, regulatory claims, and anticompetitive impacts. Fertilizer importers face public reporting of companies, countries, fertilizer types, and import quantities. Fertilizer retailers and distributors may face more transparency expectations if USDA recommends daily, weekly, or monthly price reporting.
Key Provisions
- Requires USDA and the Economic Research Service to publish a public fertilizer industry report within one year.
- Requires analysis of 25-year fertilizer market size, value, trends, and pricing patterns by fertilizer type.
- Requires import analysis by fertilizer type, importing company, quantity, source country, and trade-duty price effects.
- Requires review of manufacturing, distribution, retail, transportation, logistics, natural-disaster disruptions, and market concentration.
- Requires comparison of emerging fertilizer technologies with conventional fertilizers on prices, crop-use efficiency, and crop yields.
- Requires evaluation of regulatory burdens, public price-reporting transparency, and whether USDA should establish fertilizer price reporting.
- Prohibits the report from including confidential business information.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Requires USDA, in consultation with the Economic Research Service, to publish within one year a non-confidential report on the U.S. fertilizer industry covering market size and value over 25 years, pricing patterns, imports by type, company, and country, antidumping and countervailing duty effects, supply-chain structure and disruptions, market concentration and anticompetitive impacts, emerging fertilizer technologies, regulatory burdens, price-reporting transparency, and projected growth and risks.
Key Policy Areas
Agriculture, Fertilizer, Market Transparency, USDA
Primary Purpose
Requires USDA, in consultation with the Economic Research Service, to publish within one year a non-confidential report on the U.S. fertilizer industry covering market size and value over 25 years, pricing patterns, imports by type, company, and country, antidumping and countervailing duty effects, supply-chain structure and disruptions, market concentration and anticompetitive impacts, emerging fertilizer technologies, regulatory burdens, price-reporting transparency, and projected growth and risks.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Farmers
- Agricultural policy researchers
- Congressional agriculture committees
- Emerging fertilizer technology developers
Identified Costs
- USDA report staff
- Economic Research Service analysts
- Fertilizer manufacturers
- Fertilizer importers
- Fertilizer retailers
- Fertilizer distributors
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeReferred to the Subcommittee on Forestry and Horticulture.
Referred to the Subcommittee on Conservation, Research, and Biotechnology.
Mrs. Hinson (for herself, Ms. Budzinski, Mr. Feenstra, Ms. Perez, …
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Emerging fertilizer technology developers, Farmers, Fertilizer distributors
Positive-direction: Emerging fertilizer technology developers, Farmers
Negative-direction: Fertilizer distributors, Fertilizer importers, Fertilizer retailers
Congressional agriculture committees, Economic Research Service analysts, USDA report staff
Positive-direction: Congressional agriculture committees
Negative-direction: Economic Research Service analysts, USDA report staff
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology