Nevada Organic Phosphate Inc. (CSE: NOP) (OTCQB: NOPFF) Targets Important Position in Tightening Global Fertilizer Market

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

  • Nevada Organic Phosphate Inc. is positioning its Murdock Project in Nevada to supply organic rock phosphate fertilizer to the growing North American organic agriculture sector.
  • Global fertilizer supply chains are under renewed pressure as conflict-linked shipping disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz affect phosphate and nitrogen markets.
  • Although Morocco controls the largest phosphate reserves, China remains the world’s largest phosphate fertilizer producer and exporter,  underscoring geopolitical concentration risk in global supply.
  • Nevada Organic Phosphate’s business model centers on direct application raw phosphate, requiring limited processing beyond grinding and bagging.
  • The company is targeting the expanding U.S. organic food market, estimated at roughly US$35 billion annually.
  • Rising fertilizer and transportation costs are increasingly linked to broader food inflation trends affecting North American consumers.

As geopolitical instability places renewed pressure on global fertilizer markets, smaller North American phosphate projects are attracting increased investor attention. Nevada Organic Phosphate (CSE: NOP) (OTCQB: NOPFF), a B.C.-based leader in organic sedimentary phosphate exploration, is focused on its Murdock Project in Elko County, Nevada, offering a potentially large scale domestic supply of raw organic phosphate fertilizer for U.S. agriculture, perfect for the certification requirements of the growing organic food market. 

The company is rare in avoiding the chemical processing used with most fertilizers. The project is designed around a comparatively simple operating model: mine phosphate-bearing material, grind it, bag it and ship it directly to agricultural customers. American farming environmental practices are rapidly moving to a direct application of REACTIVE rather than soluble chemical phosphate. NOP does not have to compete with the conventional chemical agricultural input industry.

That proposition comes at a time when fertilizer security has become a growing concern for governments as well as farmers and investors. Global fertilizer markets have been rattled in recent months by disruptions linked to the conflict involving Iran and shipping restrictions through the Strait of Hormuz. Around 30% of global fertilizer trade normally moves through the narrow maritime corridor (https://ibn.fm/cDypH).

The consequences are already affecting agricultural supply chains. Nitrogen and phosphate shipments have faced delays, while fertilizer costs and freight rates have climbed. China, the world’s largest producer of nitrogen and phosphate fertilizers, has prioritized domestic supply, limiting export availability at a time of heightened global demand.

The tightening market has broader implications beyond agriculture. U.S. consumers are already seeing elevated food prices linked partly to higher transportation and agricultural input costs. A separate report noted that Americans could face additional upward pressure on food prices if fertilizer shortages persist into future planting seasons (https://ibn.fm/atwyR).

Against that backdrop, domestic phosphate supply has become strategically relevant. Phosphorus is a critical nutrient for plant growth and is used primarily in agriculture through phosphate fertilizers. Roughly 90% of global phosphorus consumption is tied to agricultural applications. While Morocco controls the world’s largest phosphate reserves, China remains the dominant producer and exporter of processed phosphate fertilizers, creating concentration risk within global supply chains.

Nevada Organic Phosphate is attempting to position itself as a U.S.-based alternative focused specifically on organic and regenerative agriculture markets. The company says the Murdock Project hosts an Exploration Target Mineral Inventory, or ETMI, estimated at between 10 million and 46 million tonnes of phosphate-bearing material grading between 3% and 15% P2O5. The estimate is based on an average thickness of 3.5 metres and a specific gravity of 2.61.

In addition to the primary Murdock target zone, Nevada Organic Phosphate has identified three additional target areas, which the company says could increase total ETMI potential to between 200 million and 220 million tonnes.

The fact that Nevada Organic Phosphate is targeting direct application reactive phosphate for organic farming systems matters because conventional phosphate fertilizer production often requires extensive chemical processing, including acid treatment and large industrial facilities. By contrast, direct application phosphate involves applying finely ground phosphate rock directly to soils, particularly in regenerative and organic agricultural systems where biological soil activity helps release nutrients over time. The company argues this approach could lower capital expenditure requirements while reducing environmental impact. Nevada Organic Phosphate says the material would not require major downstream chemical processing and would avoid contamination risks associated with some conventional fertilizer production methods.

Management also points to broader trends in U.S. agriculture that increasingly favor regenerative farming practices and organic certification standards. Organic food demand in North America has expanded steadily over the past decade, driven by both consumer preference and retailer adoption. That growth has created parallel demand for organic agricultural inputs, including phosphate products approved for organic farming applications.

Nevada’s location could also provide logistical advantages. The Murdock Project sits within trucking and rail distance of major U.S. agricultural markets, potentially reducing transport dependence compared with imported phosphate products arriving through international shipping routes. The project’s positioning also aligns with evolving U.S. critical minerals policy. Phosphate has increasingly been recognized as strategically important because of its role in food production and agricultural security.

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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