Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
HomeRuralMission to secure long-term nitrogen security

Mission to secure long-term nitrogen security

As Australian grain growers face mounting pressures from rising fertiliser prices, Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) is calling on the world’s top science researchers to join a $115 million research mission to investigate critical nitrogen options, including production.

GRDC board chairperson and South Australian grain grower Sharon Starick announced the Nitrogen Mission this month.

The 10-year research mission is focused on breakthrough science to redefine how Australian growers produce, use and manage nitrogen.

It aims to help growers reduce nitrogen costs – without sacrificing yield – and secure long-term supply, investigating everything from genetic technologies for biological nitrogen-fixing crops to novel fertiliser production.

It opens a $50 million Request for Partnering under the Nitrogen Mission – calling researchers and innovators to join GRDC in building out the mission and delivering breakthrough nitrogen solutions for agriculture in Australia and worldwide.

Nitrogen fertiliser is one of the largest costs for Australian growers and one of the most exposed to global price shocks and supply disruptions.

“I am a grower and I know how disruptive, expensive and stressful the current Middle East crisis has been for all. The reliance on overseas supply chains has been a long-term issue for growers and meant we have regularly been at the mercy of supply from both a price and access perspective,” Mrs Starick said.

“To grow productive crops, we need nitrogen fertiliser. It is one of most expensive inputs on farm so research that brings costs down would be a major win for growers’ bottom lines.

“This year GRDC is in a financial position where we can invest in a very significant, long-term way at a level that brings highly regarded and brilliant scientists from Australia and the world together to help solve this very real issue.”

With Australian growers spending more than $1 billion on nitrogen-based fertiliser annually, GRDC managing director Nigel Hart said the current Middle East conflict had caused major disruptions and exacerbated the cost-price squeeze for growers.

“Farming is a tough business, and the fuel and fertiliser price rises we have seen in the past few months have amplified the pressure facing growers,” he said.

“What growers need is some control back over nitrogen costs, supply and source. We can’t produce Australian urea or fertiliser tomorrow, but GRDC is investing in robust scientific research that will ensure growers have the tools and technology they need to control nitrogen management into the future.

“We started work on the mission before the Middle East crisis, but it has highlighted the critical need for discovery science in the nitrogen space. We need to look at how we make nitrogen supply more secure for Australian growers.”

The amount growers are paying is substantial, as even a 15 per cent reduction in long-term nitrogen fertiliser costs, while maintaining yields, is estimated to deliver more than $1 billion of value to Australian grain growers through improved gross margins and reduced financial risk.

“There are staggering gains to be made for growers if this investment delivers new science that transforms how we use, manage and/or create nitrogen fertilisers on farm,” Mr Hart said.

“The mission will build on the substantive foundational investments GRDC has made into nitrogen over the past 30 years.”

The Nitrogen Mission aims to deliver substantive benefits for growers, agriculture and the community. Key goals include:

• More than halve long-term nitrogen costs as a percentage of crop revenue

• Halve nitrogen losses to the environment, generate higher yields per unit of N applied

• Reduce exposure to global supply chains and pricing risk

• Lower greenhouse gas emissions intensity

• Build world-leading science capability and connection.

The Nitrogen Mission will work to deliver these goals through areas such as genetic technologies to unlock biological nitrogen fixation in pulse crops and enable those traits in cereals, distributed renewable-energy powered production technologies for nitrogen fertiliser, and novel technology stacks that combine prescriptive analytics, precision placement and new fertiliser formulations, as well as advances in agronomy.

Read more about the Nitrogen Mission at grdc.com.au/research/research-missions/grdc-nitrogen-mission

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Tigers kick highest score to crush Cats

The BSR Tigers kicked their highest score for the 2026 season on Saturday as they crushed the Blyth-Snowtown Cats by 83 points at Blyth. The...

More News

Infrastructure debate

As the City of Playford continues to grow in population and development, the issue of provision of appropriate infrastructure for the community also continues...

Eagles too strong for Rams

Hummocks Watchman Eagles kept their finals chances alive with a 36-point victory on the road against Virginia last Saturday at Sneaky’s Oval. The Rams came...

Century of change: Alick Barr celebrates 100 years

More than 120 family members and friends gathered at the Balaklava Bowling Club on Sunday, 7 June to celebrate a remarkable milestone as Alick...

Rate rise likely as council rejects freeze proposal

Clare & Gilbert Valleys Council has signalled a likely rates increase for 2026-27 after rejecting a proposal to freeze rates amid cost-of-living concerns and...

Man dies in Lower Light crash

A man has died following a crash between a car and a truck at Lower Light on Monday night. SAPOL reports police and emergency services...

Roosters thrash Magpies to make seven in a row

Two Wells further enhanced their premiership credentials with a demolition of last year’s premiers Mallala by 108 points in last Saturday’s round eight clash...

Tigers push Roosters to the brink

Southern Flinders def by Crystal Brook 48-50 The Roosters survived an almighty scare from the Tigers, securing a two-goal victory to maintain second on the...

Hawks finally get back on track

The RSMU Hawks finally got back on track on Saturday winning their first game since round three with a 26-point victory over the North...

Dublin’s history planted for future

About two months after uncovering its buried history, the Dublin community has planted the seed for its 175th anniversary celebrations in 25 years time...

Wandering Tales to showcase Goyder stories

Local storytellers are set to take centre stage across the Goyder region after funding was secured for a year-long series of events celebrating local...