Key Market Trends and Insights
- Nigeria dominated the market in 2025 with an 11.32% share, and is projected to grow at a CAGR of 8.94% over the forecast period 2025 to 2035.
- By Type, the Nitrogenous segment is projected to witness a CAGR of 7.08% over the forecast period.
- By Crop Type, the Cereals & Grains segment is expected to register 7.35% CAGR over the forecast period due to the critical role of wheat, maize, sorghum and rice cultivation in regional food security programmes and government-backed intensification initiatives across Sub-Saharan Africa and the MENA agricultural belt.
Market Size & Forecast
- Market Size in 2025: USD 54.77 Billion
- Projected Market Size in 2035: USD 95.48 Billion
- CAGR from 2026-2035: 7.22%
- Fastest-Growing Regional Market: Sub-Saharan Africa
The Middle East And Africa Fertilizers market growth is strongly underpinned by government-led food security initiatives, expanding domestic production capacity, and the structural need to improve soil nutrient levels across large swathes of agriculturally underserved African territory. Nigeria's Presidential Fertilizer Initiative has set a target to reduce fertilizer imports by 50% by 2027 through expanded domestic production leveraging new urea manufacturing capacity. Saudi Arabia earmarked USD 1.2 billion for fertilizer import-substitution projects in 2024, targeting integrated ammonia and urea complexes. Morocco's OCP Group launched its Strategic Program Mzinda-Meskala in March 2025 to add 9 million tonnes of phosphate fertilizer capacity by 2028, powered entirely by renewable energy. The Middle East And Africa Fertilizers market trends reflect accelerating investment in precision agriculture technologies, fertigation infrastructure, and specialty fertilizer grades aligned with expanding greenhouse farming operations and drip-irrigated cropping systems.
Key Take Aways
- Key Takeaway 1: Nigeria leads the MEA fertilizers market with an 11.32% share, anchored by major urea production capacity and a Presidential Fertilizer Initiative targeting significant import substitution.
- Key Takeaway 2: Nitrogenous fertilizers, particularly urea and ammonia, dominate regional demand driven by cereal and grain cultivation across Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Key Takeaway 3: OCP Group's 9 million tonne capacity expansion and Saudi Arabia's USD 1.2 billion import-substitution programme are reshaping the competitive landscape for domestic MEA fertilizer production.
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned
- i. Yara International ASA
- ii. OCP Group
- iii. SABIC Agri-Nutrients Co.
- iv. ICL Group Ltd
- v. K+S Aktiengesellschaft
- vi. Ma'aden (Saudi Arabian Mining Company)
- vii. Foskor (PTY) Ltd
- viii. Kynoch Fertilizer
- ix. Golden Fertilizer Company Limited

