Recent geopolitical events and policy shifts are creating ripple effects across one of the most foundational—but often overlooked—chemical supply chains in the global economy. For companies like Thymly Products that rely on phosphate-based ingredients, including baking and functional food applications, the current disruption in sulfur and sulfuric acid markets is more than a headline—it is a structural shift that will influence cost, availability, and sourcing strategy in the months ahead.

Why Sulfur and Sulfuric Acid Matters More Than It Seems

Sulfuric acid is widely recognized as the most heavily consumed industrial chemical in the world. Its importance stems from its central role in producing phosphoric acid, which serves as the backbone of all phosphate-based products. [exiger.com], [chemanalyst.com]

The connection is straightforward but critical:

  • Sulfur → converted into sulfuric acid
  • Sulfuric acid + phosphate rock → phosphoric acid
  • Phosphoric acid → phosphate ingredients used in food, agriculture, and industry

This chemical dependency means that any disruption at the sulfur or sulfuric acid level quickly flows downstream. Nearly 90% of global phosphoric acid production relies on the “wet process,” which directly uses sulfuric acid as a key reactant. [chemanalyst.com], [bcinsight….ugroup.com]

In short, without sulfuric acid, large-scale phosphate production cannot occur.

What’s Driving the Current Disruption

  1. Supply constraints from the Middle East

A significant share of global sulfur production is tied to oil and gas refining, particularly in the Persian Gulf. Disruptions to shipping routes and exports in this region have constrained global sulfur availability, tightening supply chains that are already highly concentrated. [intellinews.com], [discoverya…ert.com.au]

  1. Export controls and policy shifts in China

China—one of the world’s largest producers of sulfur and sulfuric acid—has implemented restrictions on exports, with a clear priority on maintaining domestic fertilizer supply. [exiger.com]

This policy shift is especially impactful because China has historically acted as a balancing supplier in global markets. Reduced exports remove a key pressure valve, amplifying volatility elsewhere.

  1. A bottleneck at the “process level”

Unlike many commodity disruptions, this is not simply a logistics issue or a price fluctuation. The current crisis is occurring at a fundamental step in chemical processing. Sulfur is not a substitutable input—it is a required reagent that enables phosphate production. [discoverya…ert.com.au]

That distinction makes this disruption more persistent and harder to offset through traditional supply chain adjustments.

Implications for Phosphate Supply

Reduced phosphoric acid availability

Because sulfuric acid is a direct input to phosphoric acid production, reduced access leads to lower output. This effect is already visible, as some producers have begun scaling back phosphate production due to rising sulfur costs and constrained supply. [discoverya…ert.com.au]

Priority allocation to agriculture

Fertilizer production accounts for the majority of phosphoric acid consumption globally, far exceeding food and specialty uses. [epa.gov]

In periods of scarcity, governments and producers tend to prioritize agricultural applications to protect food security. Recent export restrictions and policy signals reinforce this trend. [exiger.com]

For food ingredient manufacturers, this means competing for supply in a market where your applications—while essential—are not the primary allocation priority.

Impact on Food-Grade Phosphate Ingredients

For companies supplying baking phosphates and other functional ingredients, the downstream effects are becoming increasingly clear.

  1. Upward pressure on costs

Rising sulfur prices are already feeding into higher sulfuric acid costs, which in turn increase the cost of phosphoric acid. This inflation cascades through to finished phosphate ingredients.

Recent market analysis shows that increases in upstream raw materials—including sulfur—have been a primary driver of rising phosphoric acid and phosphate product prices since late 2025. [niranbio.com]

  1. Tightening availability

Supply constraints are not limited to cost. Reduced production capacity and shifting allocation priorities can lead to:

  • Longer lead times
  • Reduced spot availability
  • More rigid contract structures

Because food-grade phosphates often rely on higher-purity phosphoric acid (sometimes derived from energy-intensive production routes), they may face additional pressure when overall acid supply tightens. [niranbio.com]

  1. Increased volatility

This is not a one-time shock. The combination of geopolitical risk, concentrated production, and policy intervention introduces sustained uncertainty into the supply chain.

As a result, customers may experience periodic disruptions across specific phosphate types and formulations.

What This Means for the Food Industry

For food manufacturers and ingredient suppliers alike, the current environment requires a more proactive approach to supply chain management.

Expect continued pricing volatility

Input-driven cost increases are likely to persist, particularly if sulfur supply remains constrained or export controls continue.

Plan for supply variability

Companies may need to build additional flexibility into sourcing strategies, including diversified suppliers and revised inventory practices.

Prepare for formulation discussions

In some cases, customers may explore reformulation or alternative systems to manage costs or improve supply security.

Looking Ahead

The phosphate ingredient market has always been closely tied to global resource flows, but the current disruption highlights just how interconnected—and vulnerable—these supply chains can be.

As sulfur availability, geopolitical developments, and government policies continue to evolve, phosphate markets will remain sensitive to upstream changes. For companies operating in baking and functional ingredients, staying informed and adapting sourcing strategies will be essential to navigating this period of volatility.

 

 

 

 

 

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