Food prices likely to rise due to Iran war, farmers' union says
Iran's continued blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has led to higher costs for fuel and fertiliser, both crucial elements of food production.
A significant portion of the world's natural gas, crude oil and fertiliser normally passes through the Strait of Hormuz, which has now been effectively closed for more than three weeks.
Bradshaw said: "For our glasshouse horticultural production, things like cucumbers, peppers tomatoes, it'll over the next month, six weeks that we see those cost increases coming through to the retailer. "And then for some of our field-scale produce and some of our crops and milk and things like that, it'll be the next three to six months that we start to see those prices coming through. "
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