Nevada Organic Phosphate Inc. (CSE: NOP) (OTCQB: NOPFF) Is in a Unique Position to Profit From Fossil Fuel and Energy Pressures Dramatically Reshaping Fertilizer Economics

Disseminated on behalf of Nevada Organic Phosphate Inc. (CSE: NOP) (OTCQB: NOPFF)and may include paid advertising.

  • The company is advancing its Murdock Mountain phosphate project in Nevada with a focus on direct-application organic fertilizer.
  • Rising oil and natural gas prices are increasing pressure on conventional fertilizer markets, many of which depend on fossil fuel elements and energy-intensive processing.
  • Fertilizer prices have surged in 2026 amid the Middle East conflict and disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Nevada Organic Phosphate’s model centers on raw phosphate requiring simple grinding and bagging rather than energy and fossil fuel intensive chemical processing.
  • The company is targeting the entire U.S. agricultural market, particularly the expanding organic and regenerative farming sectors.

The fertilizer industry, where oil and natural gas often play a central role in production, is highly sensitive to fluctuations in energy markets. Conventional urea and ammonia based nitrogen fertilizers are among the most energy-intensive to produce, relying heavily on natural gas as both a fuel and a source of hydrogen. When oil and gas markets tighten, fertilizer production costs often rise in parallel.

That dynamic has become more pronounced in 2026. Fertilizer markets have been disrupted following the conflict in the Middle East and associated shipping interruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, a corridor through which roughly one-third of global seaborne fertilizer trade moves, according to reporting by CNBC (https://ibn.fm/b5HOK). Fertilizer prices have risen sharply since the start of the conflict, with urea prices in some markets reportedly climbing from roughly $400–$490 per metric ton to approximately $700. Oxford Economics estimates urea and ammonia prices have surged by 50% and 20%, respectively, since hostilities began.

Global fertilizer supply has also tightened due to shutdowns of regional production facilities and export restrictions in China. These disruptions are raising concerns around food security and farmer input costs during key planting seasons.

Against that backdrop, Nevada Organic Phosphate (CSE: NOP) (OTCQB: NOPFF), a B.C.-based leader in organic sedimentary phosphate exploration, is positioning itself around a different model: supplying naturally occurring phosphate fertilizer which, unlike conventional synthetic alternatives, requires simple grinding and bagging. The Vancouver-based company is focused on advancing its Murdock Mountain phosphate project in northeastern Nevada, where it aims to produce raw organic phosphate fertilizer for U.S. agriculture. 

Unlike synthetic fertilizers that require substantial chemical conversion, the company intends to market phosphate material that can be mined, ground, bagged and shipped for direct field application, helping to reduce dependence upon volatile fossil fuel markets. This distinction is increasingly relevant as elevated oil and gas prices persist. 

Farmers in North America remain exposed to global fertilizer pricing despite domestic fossil fuel and fertilizer production. According to the U.S. Fertilizer Institute, around a third of nitrogen, phosphate and potash fertilizers used in the United States are imported. That leaves U.S. agriculture vulnerable when international supply chains are disrupted. Even in North America, where domestic oil production remains significant, producers may be incentivized to export supply into higher-priced global markets, contributing to tighter domestic pricing conditions.

Higher fertilizer costs can affect planting decisions, reduce margins for growers, and contribute to inflation in food prices. Moreover, for producers focused on organic agriculture, an expanding market, the challenge can be greater still, since certified organic operations require approved nutrient inputs that meet stricter regulatory standards. 

Nevada Organic Phosphate is unique in offering a way to deal with both inflationary fuel issues and the growing market for organic foods. The company intends to serve the broader U.S. market while also serving the growing North American organic food sector, which it estimates at approximately $35 billion.

Nevada Organic Phosphate’s primary asset is the Murdock Mountain phosphate target zone in Elko County, Nevada. The company has outlined an Exploration Target Mineral Inventory estimate of 10 million to 46 million tonnes for the main target area, with phosphate grades ranging from 3% to 15% P₂O₅. Additional target zones identified nearby could increase overall exploration potential materially, according to company disclosures.

NOP has continued advancing the project through drilling and fieldwork, with the company reporting in April that it remains on track for its 2026 drill program. Recent assay work has also suggested weighted average phosphate grades above 10% P₂O₅ in portions of the Upper Phosphatic Zone, alongside multi-nutrient chemistry supportive of soil-conditioning applications.

Beyond current geopolitical disruptions, Nevada Organic Phosphate may also be aligned with longer-term agricultural shifts. Farmers and policymakers are increasingly focused on regenerative agriculture, soil health, and reducing runoff from synthetic chemical fertilizers. Direct-application phosphate products fit within that broader movement toward alternative nutrient strategies.

As the company moves toward initial production, its focus on minimally processed phosphate fertilizer places it within a part of the agricultural supply chain that may draw increased investor attention should fertilizer inflation remain elevated and food security concerns continue to build.

For more information, visit the company’s website at www.NevadaPhosphate.com.

NOTE TO INVESTORS: The latest news and updates relating to NOP are available in the company’s newsroom at https://ibn.fm/NOP 

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