Canada Shuts Down Trump’s Potash Threat as U.S. Farmers Face a Fertilizer Time Bomb

Canada has quietly but decisively neutralized one of Donald Trump’s most dangerous trade threats, and the fallout is already rattling America’s farm belt. Potash — the essential fertilizer mineral that underpins U.S. food production — was Canada’s top mineral export to the United States in 2024, worth $4.2 billion, largely sourced from massive deposits in Western Canada. When Trump again floated severe tariffs on Canadian potash, analysts warned this was not just another trade dispute, but a direct threat to U.S. agricultural survival.
Unlike steel or aluminum, potash is irreplaceable. The United States imports nearly 90% of its potash, and roughly 80% of that comes from Canada. There is no domestic substitute, no quick alternative supplier, and no realistic way for U.S. producers to fill the gap. As Canadian officials bluntly noted, “They need our potash. It can’t be produced in sufficient quantities in the United States.” That simple fact turns Trump’s tariff threat into economic self-sabotage.
The danger is magnified by history. In 2018, Trump’s tariffs on China triggered a collapse in U.S. soybean exports, forcing Washington to spend tens of billions of dollars on emergency farm bailouts. But fertilizer is different. When soybeans lose buyers, farmers suffer. When fertilizer becomes unaffordable, crops fail. This time, Trump is targeting the very input every American farmer depends on, transforming a trade tactic into a systemic food-production risk.
Canadian leaders have responded with calm precision rather than escalation. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe urged restraint, reminding Canadians to take Trump “seriously, not literally,” while trade experts emphasized the uncomfortable truth: America needs Canadian potash far more than Canada needs the U.S. market. With the 2026 USMCA (CUSMA) review approaching, Ottawa has chosen stability and leverage over noise, confident that economic reality favors Canada.

Behind the scenes, Canada is already diversifying. Major producers like Nutrien are expanding export capacity and securing long-term supply agreements with Europe and Asia. As Washington threatens tariffs, global buyers are lining up, eager for reliable Canadian supply. The contrast is stark: Canada prepares calmly for volatility, while U.S. farmers face soaring costs, shrinking margins, and the risk of insolvency.
The political irony is brutal. Trump’s most loyal states — Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, and the Dakotas — would be hit first. Potash price spikes raise fertilizer costs, which drive up corn and soybean prices, squeeze livestock producers, and ultimately raise grocery bills nationwide. Farm groups have already warned the White House that fertilizer tariffs would be economically suicidal, turning Trump’s own base into collateral damage.

Canada, meanwhile, is not weaponizing agriculture. It did not start a tariff war, nor did it threaten farmers for leverage. By maintaining its role as a stable supplier and expanding global partnerships, Ottawa has effectively let U.S. market pressure do the work. As analysts note, every new threat from Washington hands Canada more leverage ahead of the 2026 negotiations, not less.
Trump’s renewed potash threat is not just a trade skirmish — it is the sequel to a crisis America should have already learned from. In 2018, soybeans were the warning shot. In 2025, fertilizer is the fault line. Canada can withstand tariffs. The real question is whether American farmers can survive being used as bargaining chips once again. History suggests they cannot.