Rock Phosphate Monthly Price - Singapore Dollar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: 65.885 (50.99%)
Chart

Description: Phosphate rock (Morocco), 70% BPL, contract, f.a.s. Casablanca

Unit: Singapore Dollar per Metric Ton



Source: Fertilizer Week; Fertilizer International; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Rock phosphate is a naturally occurring phosphate-bearing mineral used primarily as a feedstock for phosphate fertilizers and, in some cases, for direct application to soils with suitable acidity and agronomic conditions. On commodity markets it is commonly priced by grade and delivery terms, with a widely referenced benchmark being rock phosphate at 70% BPL, quoted on a CIF basis in US dollars per metric ton. BPL, or bone phosphate of lime, is a traditional measure of phosphate content used in the trade. The material is mined, beneficiated, and shipped in bulk, with price differentials reflecting phosphate concentration, impurity levels, moisture content, and freight costs.

Its principal use is in the manufacture of phosphoric acid, which is then converted into fertilizers such as diammonium phosphate, monoammonium phosphate, and triple superphosphate. It also has smaller uses in animal feed supplements, industrial chemicals, and certain soil amendment applications. Because phosphate is an essential plant nutrient, rock phosphate sits at the base of the phosphorus fertilizer chain and links agricultural demand to mining, processing, and ocean freight logistics.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by geology, beneficiation requirements, and transport infrastructure. Economically workable deposits are concentrated in a limited number of sedimentary basins and, to a lesser extent, igneous deposits. Sedimentary ores are often favored for large-scale fertilizer production because they can support high-volume mining and processing, though they may require washing, flotation, or calcination to raise usable phosphate content and reduce contaminants such as silica, carbonates, cadmium, or heavy metals. The grade of the ore matters because lower-grade material raises mining, processing, and shipping costs per unit of contained phosphate.

Mining is capital intensive and tied to long lead times for permitting, pit development, beneficiation plants, rail links, and port facilities. Output can be constrained by overburden removal, water availability, energy costs, and the need for bulk-handling infrastructure. Because rock phosphate is a mined resource rather than an annually renewed crop, supply responds more to reserve quality, depletion of accessible seams, and investment cycles than to seasonal planting patterns. Freight access is especially important because the benchmark is often quoted CIF, making ocean shipping and port congestion part of the delivered cost structure. Environmental regulation and waste handling also affect supply, particularly where tailings, phosphogypsum, or water discharge must be managed.

Demand Drivers

Demand is driven mainly by fertilizer production, which links rock phosphate to global crop cultivation and soil nutrient replacement. Phosphorus is one of the three primary macronutrients required by plants, so demand persists across cereals, oilseeds, fruits, vegetables, and pasture systems. Unlike nitrogen, phosphorus has no large atmospheric source and must be mined or recovered, which gives rock phosphate a structural role in agricultural input chains. Demand is strongest where soils are phosphorus-deficient, crop intensification is high, and fertilizer application is used to sustain yields.

The main substitution relationship is with processed phosphate fertilizers rather than with other nutrients. Rock phosphate can be converted into phosphoric acid and downstream products, or in some cases applied directly to acidic soils where dissolution is agronomically effective. Direct application is less suitable in neutral or alkaline soils, so demand depends on soil chemistry as well as crop economics. Seasonal buying patterns often follow planting cycles and fertilizer procurement schedules, while longer-run demand is influenced by acreage, cropping intensity, livestock feed requirements, and the spread of high-yield farming systems. Recycling of phosphorus from manure, crop residues, and industrial recovery can moderate demand, but these sources do not fully replace mined phosphate in most fertilizer systems.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Rock phosphate prices are influenced by the US dollar because international trade is commonly denominated in dollars, while production and consumption occur across multiple currencies. A stronger dollar can raise local-currency costs for importers and affect purchasing behavior. Freight rates, bunker fuel costs, and port handling charges matter because the benchmark is often CIF, so delivered price reflects both mine economics and shipping conditions. Inventory holding costs and fertilizer-chain working capital also affect pricing, especially where buyers time purchases around planting seasons.

As a bulk industrial commodity, rock phosphate is less directly financialized than metals or energy products, but it still responds to broad shifts in credit conditions, inflation, and agricultural margins. When fertilizer producers face tighter financing or weaker crop prices, procurement can slow and spot demand can soften. Storage is possible but not trivial because moisture control, contamination, and handling costs matter. Price relationships with downstream phosphate fertilizers often reflect conversion margins, while correlations with other agricultural inputs arise through farm profitability and fertilizer affordability.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 2021129.20-
Apr 2021126.74-1.91%
May 2021136.457.66%
Jun 2021166.6322.12%
Jul 2021169.371.64%
Aug 2021185.499.52%
Sep 2021198.917.24%
Oct 2021199.260.18%
Nov 2021207.674.22%
Dec 2021241.3316.21%
Jan 2022233.85-3.10%
Feb 2022232.27-0.68%
Mar 2022242.984.61%
Apr 2022340.7340.23%
May 2022352.483.45%
Jun 2022397.8012.86%
Jul 2022446.1912.17%
Aug 2022442.98-0.72%
Sep 2022452.492.15%
Oct 2022452.35-0.03%
Nov 2022416.69-7.88%
Dec 2022405.93-2.58%
Jan 2023397.91-1.97%
Feb 2023429.147.85%
Mar 2023462.797.84%
Apr 2023459.52-0.71%
May 2023461.850.51%
Jun 2023463.910.45%
Jul 2023456.54-1.59%
Aug 2023467.622.43%
Sep 2023474.111.39%
Oct 2023475.760.35%
Dec 2023203.66-57.19%
Jan 2024203.700.02%
Feb 2024205.040.66%
Mar 2024204.37-0.33%
Apr 2024206.941.26%
May 2024206.07-0.42%
Jun 2024206.140.03%
Jul 2024205.33-0.39%
Aug 2024200.67-2.27%
Sep 2024197.75-1.45%
Oct 2024199.640.96%
Nov 2024203.852.11%
Dec 2024205.520.82%
Jan 2025207.721.07%
Feb 2025205.46-1.09%
Mar 2025203.78-0.82%
Apr 2025202.01-0.87%
May 2025197.41-2.28%
Jun 2025195.84-0.80%
Jul 2025195.38-0.23%
Aug 2025196.050.34%
Sep 2025195.93-0.06%
Oct 2025197.470.79%
Nov 2025198.840.69%
Dec 2025196.97-0.94%
Jan 2026196.00-0.49%
Feb 2026193.29-1.38%
Mar 2026195.090.93%

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